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1 fter the death of their relative in the ICU (brain death).
2 fter the death of their relative in the ICU (brain death).
3 e 2010 AAN update on practice parameters for brain death.
4 w guidelines in 2010 on the determination of brain death.
5 onal policies regarding the determination of brain death.
6 s pertaining to the criteria for determining brain death.
7 inued prior to the clinical determination of brain death.
8 processes are perturbed in the kidney after brain death.
9 am has been at the expense of donation after brain death.
10 er cerebral angiography performed to confirm brain death.
11 and 6) implications for organ donation after brain death.
12 that very few of these survivors progress to brain death.
13 sents an inflammatory and injury response to brain death.
14 mbers of patients suspected to have suffered brain death.
15 ed as potentially useful in the diagnosis of brain death.
16 oon catheter with saline (1 mL/20 min) until brain death.
17 raphy - a reference test in the diagnosis of brain death.
18 ra-renal organs compared with donation after brain death.
19 nteen percent (95% CI, 0.12-0.23%) developed brain death.
20 s donors with cardiac arrest occurring after brain death.
21 dneys donated after circulatory death versus brain death.
22 is not recognized as a legal test to confirm brain death.
23 can be completed must remain consistent with brain death.
24 accepted neurologic examination criteria for brain death.
25 trategy before performing the CTA to confirm brain death.
26 dispose donor hearts to LV dysfunction after brain death.
27 of IL-1, TNF-alpha and IL-10 were seen after brain death.
28 e neurologic examination was consistent with brain death.
29 can be completed must remain consistent with brain death.
30 mination after a duration of 6 hrs confirmed brain death.
31 ts a decrease in the number of patients with brain death.
32 the procurement procedures for donors after brain death.
33 gans by reducing metabolic disturbances post-brain death.
34 produced by ischemia-reperfusion injury and brain death.
35 emic and pulmonary inflammatory responses to brain death.
36 All cytokines were increased following brain death.
37 eatly increased after the induction of donor brain death.
38 intracranial hemorrhage, cerebral edema, and brain death.
39 pulmonary edema and reverses hypoxemia after brain death.
40 rio vertebrate zebrafish disease models from brain death.
41 ose, 88 (78%) died from nonsurvivable TBI or brain death.
42 myloid fibrils, and how such species promote brain death.
43 0% accurate and appropriate determination of brain death.
44 s to the proinflammatory milieu generated by brain death.
48 ulated that an attending physician determine brain death; 150 policies did not mention who could perf
49 ded 181 intracranial hemorrhage (42.5%), 100 brain deaths (23.5%), 85 stroke (19.9%), and 60 seizure
50 hemic brain injury (7% vs 1%; p = 0.02), and brain death (9% vs 1%; p = 0.005) remained more frequent
51 ist the clinician in making the diagnosis of brain death a) when components of the examination or apn
52 ist the clinician in making the diagnosis of brain death (a) when components of the examination or ap
53 kedly diminished 10 hours after induction of brain death-a decline that was obviated by administratio
54 causes of death, multiple organ failure and brain death affected respectively 40% and 27% of patient
56 racranial hypertension develops and leads to brain death after brainstem herniation or to anoxic brai
57 ly recommend caution in the determination of brain death after cardiac arrest when induced hypothermi
59 ame rapidly infused with terms such as whole brain death (all intracranial structures above the foram
62 al blood flow) are not required to establish brain death and are not a substitute for the neurologic
63 al blood flow) are not required to establish brain death and are not a substitute for the neurologic
64 g new corroborative data on the diagnosis of brain death and clarifying the United Kingdom position.
65 that TCD shortens the time between clinical brain death and computed tomography angiography (CTA) co
66 a shorter time between clinical diagnosis of brain death and CTA confirmation compared with conventio
68 e often confused by non-medical specialists, brain death and disorders of consciousness such as coma,
69 s for a global standard on the definition of brain death and donation after death by cardiac criteria
70 production in kidneys from both donors after brain death and donors after circulatory death (2367 +/-
71 ife care practices to allow the evolution of brain death and increasing the availability of ancillary
72 anagement to ameliorate the damage caused by brain death and ischemia-reperfusion injury in a rat mod
74 a exacerbates the pulmonary injury caused by brain death and primes the lung for ischemia reperfusion
75 xisting animal models that incorporate donor brain death and subsequent HTx and assessed studies for
76 recapitulates the historical development of brain death and the evolution of scintigraphic examinati
78 s) via nasogastric tube after declaration of brain death and upon acceptance as a cardiac donor, or t
79 the health care professional who determines brain death, and 212 (43.1%) stipulated that an attendin
81 duced graft function, future renal recovery, brain death, and need for dialysis, but not with future
82 and ethical ramifications of the concepts of brain death, and of controversies involved in controlled
84 onated after controlled cardiac death versus brain death, and to identify the factors that affect gra
85 rimental neurogenic pulmonary edema," "donor brain death," and "donor lung injury." DATA EXTRACTION:
86 ands brain death to be; (2) how views toward brain death are compared with those of cardiac death; an
87 n the United States for the determination of brain death are still widely variable and not fully cong
89 acranial hemorrhage, ischemic stroke, and/or brain death, as a composite outcome (odds ratio, 1.63; 9
91 ter euthanasia vs after circulatory death or brain death at a hospital in Belgium, where euthanasia i
93 omplement-driven inflammatory response after brain death (BD) and posttransplant reperfusion injury p
96 to HB donation, 4,855 cases met criteria for brain death (BD) diagnosis and were considered potential
99 changes in growth hormone (GH) levels after brain death (BD), and the effects of modulating GH throu
104 not on the brainstem, and the definition of brain death became rapidly infused with terms such as wh
106 be associated with cardiac dysfunction after brain death, but these relationships require further stu
107 lay an expanded role in the determination of brain death by improving accuracy and facilitating effec
108 nd phenotypes were matched with donors after brain death characteristics and indications, timing, sur
109 %, and 77.7% (compared with a donation after brain death cohort in the same period [n = 7221] 94%, 91
111 bout DCD, psychological barriers for DCD vs. brain death, concerns about whether death has been reach
112 donation after circulatory death donors had brain death confirmed or had clinical indications of bra
113 together, our results suggest that views of brain death continue to hamper organ donation, and are s
114 investigated whether the poor acceptance of brain death continues to the present day, focusing on th
115 sociated with ischemia-reperfusion injury or brain death contribute to innate immune activation, prom
116 th (all supratentorial structures) or higher brain death (cortical structures) virtually synonymous w
118 rked heterogeneity in animal models of donor brain death coupled to HTx, with few research groups wor
119 r irreversible neurologic injury not meeting brain death criteria), there are variations in all aspec
120 history of further refinement of UK and USA brain death criteria, one particular period stands out t
121 brain death; inconsistent legal upholding of brain death criteria; racial, ethnic, and religious pers
122 identified 855 DCD and 21,089 donation after brain death (DBD) adult, initial, whole-organ, liver-onl
123 ed fourteen (68%) kidneys were donated after brain death (DBD) and 192 (32%) after cardiac death (DCD
124 The presence of DGF in 213 donation after brain death (DBD) and 312 DCD kidney transplants from Oc
125 re the outcomes of DCD SLK to donation after brain death (DBD) and determine the impact of donor and
126 dney biopsies were taken from donation after brain death (DBD) and donation after cardiac death (DCD)
128 echniques may be adequate for donation after brain death (DBD) and low-risk DCD pancreases, as the nu
129 of cardiac arrest time (CAT) in donors after brain death (DBD) donors on pancreas transplant outcome.
130 1209 LTs were performed from donation after brain death (DBD) donors, and 24 were performed from DCD
133 r circulatory death (DCD) and donation after brain death (DBD) grafts with the novel Comprehensive Co
135 o 7.9 pmp) while the numbers of donors after brain death (DBD) has remained broadly stable (around 10
136 th (DCD) or extended criteria donation after brain death (DBD) human liver grafts during the last 7 y
137 outcomes after DCD in FHF to donation after brain death (DBD) in FHF and DCD in non-FHF over a 15-ye
139 , 430 (54%) DCD and 361 (46%) donation after brain death (DBD) kidney-only transplants were performed
142 HCV, 1164 non-HCV) and 54 129 donation after brain death (DBD) liver transplantation between 2002 and
145 ere compared with a cohort of donation after brain death (DBD) LTx recipients (n = 331) transplanted
146 ive a donor kidney from elderly donors after brain death (DBD) or after circulatory death (DCD).
147 There were 12 864 intended donation after brain death (DBD) or DCD donors from April 2004 to March
148 n all children who received a donation after brain death (DBD) or LD kidney-only transplant between 2
150 with propensity-risk-matched donation after brain death (DBD) patients and (2) in the DCD patients s
151 utcomes of 30 DCD SLK and 131 donation after brain death (DBD) SLK from Mayo Clinic Arizona and Mayo
152 th (DCD) is an alternative to Donation after Brain death (DBD), and is a growing strategy for organ p
153 2014 were separated into DCD, donation after brain death (DBD), and living donor (LD) transplants, an
154 in transplants using DCD and donation after brain death (DBD), propensity score matching was perform
160 rm ischemia time = 2 min) and donation after brain death (DBD, n = 76, warm ischemia time = none) wer
161 s) compared with kidneys from donation-after-brain-death (DBD) and donation-after-cardiac-death (DCD)
163 1, 2012, and April 30, 2015, (donation after brain death [DBD] donors) and March 1, 2013, and April 3
164 06 and 2010 (65.5% DCD, 34.5% donation after brain death [DBD]) were reviewed and baseline chronic de
165 kidney biopsies with URC (n = 8 donors after brain death [DBD], n = 8 donors after circulatory death
166 retrospective review of 1157 "donation after brain death" (DBD) and 87 DCD liver transplants performe
169 1 entitled 'A Question of Life or Death: The Brain Death Debate.' Two panels debated the issues on th
170 ters, the differences between the UK and USA brain death determination would become much less apparen
174 organ donation, barriers to organ donation, brain death, donation after cardiac death, and organ tra
175 neys tolerate cold storage less well than do brain-death donor kidneys and this finding should be con
176 donor warm ischemic times; one liver from a brain-death donor was declined for high liver function t
180 pancreata were procured from donation after brain death donors, with 314 (19.5%) from donation after
182 circulatory-death donors than for those from brain-death donors (2.36, 1.39-4.02, p for interaction=0
183 kidneys from cardiac-death donors (n=739) or brain-death donors (n=6759) showed no difference in graf
185 ve equivalent graft survival to kidneys from brain-death donors in the same age group, and are accept
186 ve equivalent graft survival to kidneys from brain-death donors in the same age group, and are accept
187 d univariate comparisons of transplants from brain-death donors versus circulatory-death donors with
190 table number of potential organ donors after brain death, donors after circulatory death have been an
193 ght family members of 17 patients undergoing brain death evaluation were enrolled: 38 family members
195 olled: 38 family members were present for 11 brain death evaluations and 20 family members were absen
197 the ability to determine irreversibility of brain death findings in patients treated with hypothermi
199 igher amounts of succinate were found in the brain death group, in conjunction with increased markers
201 suggest that chronic hypotension after donor brain death has the potential to limit cardiac function
205 ine ameliorates the inflammatory response to brain death, however norepinephrine has deleterious effe
206 instructed to procure protocols specific to brain death (ie, not cardiac death or organ donation pro
207 judged to have the potential to progress to brain death if withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment h
208 curred in 682 patients (15.1%), and included brain death in 358 patients (7.9%), cerebral infarction
210 National registry data of all donors after brain death in France and their organ recipients between
212 NS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: (1) Determination of brain death in term newborns, infants, and children is a
215 e in the PaO2/FIO2 ratio and lower values at brain death, in the whole study population (estimated ma
216 e variable clinical and legal definitions of brain death; inconsistent legal upholding of brain death
217 s), in selected potential organ donors after brain death increased lung eligibility and procurement.O
218 of deceased-donor kidneys are donated after brain death, increased recovery of kidneys donated after
219 We conducted a case-control study to assess brain death-induced inflammatory effects in human pancre
228 nical work indicates that renal status after brain death is negatively impacted by inflammation and r
230 he black market (81%) and that recovery from brain death is possible (65%), whereas nearly half belie
233 ctive of ancillary tests in the diagnosis of brain death is to demonstrate the absence of cerebral el
234 parable function and survival to donors with brain death kidneys, although they have higher rates of
235 ard-criteria kidneys from white donors after brain death, kidneys from black donors after cardiac dea
237 s, there is an urgent need to understand how brain death leads to kidney dysfunction and, hence, how
242 onsible for the differences, including donor brain death, longer cold ischemia time, diabetogenic imm
244 le-center studies showed that LVSD following brain death may be transient, and such hearts can be suc
246 of endocrine nitric oxide bioactivity after brain death may provide a novel means to improve the qua
248 ischemic stroke, intracranial hemorrhage, or brain death.Measurements and Main Results: We included 1
249 othermically, with 6 being from donors after brain death (median cold ischemia time 33 +/- 36.9 hours
250 4) Apnea testing to support the diagnosis of brain death must be performed safely and requires docume
251 4) Apnea testing to support the diagnosis of brain death must be performed safely and requires docume
252 rence between circulatory-death (n=1768) and brain-death (n=4127) groups (HR 1.14, 95% CI 0.95-1.36,
253 s (Group 2: 4 h of donor ventilation without brain death [n = 5]; and Group 3: no donor brain death w
254 associated with organ donation included age, brain death, neurological diagnoses, chest x-ray finding
255 ted data on donor demographics, mechanism of brain death, number of organs procured and transplanted,
257 ed donor age, sex, height, type (donor after brain death or circulatory death), bilirubin, smoking hi
263 f cardiac death; and (3) the extent to which brain death perception contributes to the low rate of de
264 Our results suggest that resistance toward brain death persists, with the majority of respondents e
266 if survival is null, the high proportion of brain deaths provides opportunity for organ donation.
268 ormalize the chronic hypotension produced by brain death reduced the expression of PAR to a level bel
270 >/= 170 cm tall, of non-black race, suffered brain death secondary to trauma, hepatitis C antibody-ne
272 were administered a validated "understanding brain death" survey before and after the intervention.
276 owing: (1) what the Asian public understands brain death to be; (2) how views toward brain death are
278 ed that the maximum potential donation after brain death to donation after circulatory death substitu
280 ia, but claimed that patients diagnosed with brain death using United Kingdom criteria could recover.
292 ant dialysis and nontraumatic cause of donor brain death were identified as independent risk factors
294 is qualified to perform the determination of brain death, what are the necessary prerequisites for te
295 Hearts are sourced from donors following brain death, which exposes donor hearts to substantial p
297 ath confirmed or had clinical indications of brain death with clear mitigating circumstances in all b
298 n death evaluation improves understanding of brain death with no apparent adverse impact on psycholog
300 d all reported donors aged 18-70 years after brain death without a lung recovery contraindication and