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1 t delays to a PCI-capable facility (incurred ischemia time).
2 at cardiac allografts subjected to prolonged ischemia time.
3 the larger/deeper the tumor, the longer the ischemia time.
4 iversity of Wisconsin solution and 6-hr cold ischemia time.
5 ), particularly in regards to decreased warm ischemia time.
6 rs can be made without unduly increasing the ischemia time.
7 h donor BMI >30 (P=0.06) and increasing cold-ischemia time.
8 nors (n = 14) matched for age, BMI, and cold ischemia time.
9 n mismatch, pretransplant dialysis, and cold ischemia time.
10 m closure and hemostasis with a limited warm ischemia time.
11 or type, HLA mismatches, donor age, and cold ischemia time.
12 onor, PRA as a continuous variable, and cold ischemia time.
13 CD14 mRNA correlated with the length of cold ischemia time.
14 t have significantly altered expression with ischemia time.
15 -term graft survival despite increasing cold ischemia time.
16 zed patients in spite of similar length cold ischemia time.
17 alent in cadaveric allografts with long cold ischemia time.
18 aminase, UNOS status, donor gender, and warm ischemia time.
19 ables included age, weight, gender, and cold ischemia time.
20 terms of recipient sex, race, age, and cold ischemia time.
21 xamined for age, sex, and pretransplantation ischemia time.
22 on, use of anti-lymphocyte agents, and graft ischemia time.
23 athology in allografts with 0.5 hour of cold-ischemia time.
24 r delayed allocation beyond 36 hours of cold ischemia time.
25 enriched in DCD donors after the first warm ischemia time.
26 ty of life, shorter operating time, and warm ischemia time.
27 eys, which is susceptible to changes in warm ischemia times.
28 and significantly decreased with longer warm ischemia times.
29 en group but nonsignificantly different warm ischemia times.
30 der, more mismatched donors with longer cold ischemia times.
31 ospital stay, immunosuppressive regimen, and ischemia times.
32 in grafts from older donors and longer cold ischemia times.
33 ytokines appear to require extended visceral ischemia times.
34 rded because of older donor age or long warm ischemia times.
35 = .04) and warm (46 vs 41 minutes; P < .001) ischemia times.
36 f delayed graft function (38% vs. 26%), cold ischemia times (12.9 vs. 13.5 hr), and graft survival wa
38 an operative time was 159 (54) minutes, warm ischemia time 180 (90) seconds, estimated blood loss 50
39 ean, 159 vs. 188 min; P<0.001), shorter warm ischemia time (2 vs. 5 min; P<0.001) and a lower intraop
40 er circulatory death (DCD, n = 36, mean warm ischemia time = 2 min) and donation after brain death (D
41 time (571 vs. 471 days, P<0.01), longer cold ischemia time (22 vs. 20 hr, P<0.01), and donor and reci
42 are as follows: operative time 4.5 hr, warm ischemia time 25 min, and blood transfused (packed red b
44 g from donors after brain death (median cold ischemia time 33 +/- 36.9 hours) and 5 being from donors
45 up, kidneys with diffuse GFT had longer cold ischemia time (34 versus 27 h), were more frequently pum
46 stimated blood loss 344.2 +/- 690.3 mL, warm ischemia time 4.9 +/- 3.4 minutes, and donor length of s
48 iver Disease score was 15 (IQR, 11-21); cold ischemia time, 8.0 hours (IQR, 6.4-9.7 hours); MEAF, 4 (
49 r remaining in situ for 120 min (30-min warm ischemia time, 90-min cold ischemia time), the second ki
50 s of panel-reactive antibodies, shorter cold ischemia times, a lower incidence of delayed graft funct
52 o the effect of each hour of additional cold ischemia time (adjusted HR 1.04, 95% CI 1.02-1.05; P < 0
53 donor organ was subjected to 1 hour of warm ischemia time after circulatory cessation, then flushed
56 s of kidneys with less than 12 hours of cold ischemia time and 74,997 dollars for those with more tha
57 donors, and is associated with a longer cold ischemia time and a potentially higher rejection rate.
60 yzed following challenge with 45 min of warm ischemia time and either 4 h of reperfusion or 24 h of c
64 e reallocated without delay to minimize cold ischemia time and maximize the utility of the graft.
65 s showed no significant differences for warm ischemia time and other donor outcomes, delayed graft fu
66 he standard FXM, potentially shortening cold ischemia time and providing clinicians with unambiguous
67 intrahepatic strictures, and prolonged cold ischemia time and rejection were associated with stone o
70 Non-treated allogeneic grafts without cold ischemia time and syngeneic grafts did not develop any T
72 ective cross-match as a means to reduce cold ischemia time and the incidence of delayed graft functio
73 SLD grafts also had significantly longer ischemia times and a higher incidence of graft loss owin
74 llocation variance designed to minimize cold ischemia times and encourage adoption of DCD protocols a
75 VI, whereas there was no association between ischemia times and HCC recurrence in patients with no VI
76 tion was found between prolonged total graft ischemia times and primary graft failure or survival fol
77 It abolishes ex vivo benching and prolonged ischemia times and provides two optimal grafts with hemo
78 ocused on graft damage due to prolonged cold ischemia times and rewarming during the long benching pr
79 y allograft dysfunction with increasing cold ischemia times and should be transplanted within 12 hr.
81 by incorporating duration of symptoms (fixed ischemia time) and anticipated transport delays to a PCI
83 body titer, extent of HLA matching, and cold-ischemia time), and post-transplantation variables (pres
84 gnificant factors such as HLA mismatch, cold ischemia time, and African-American or diabetic recipien
85 l sepsis) and donor factors (donor age, cold ischemia time, and donor cytomegalovirus status), modes
88 lanted, increment of insulin secretion, cold ischemia time, and exocrine tissue volume transplanted,
89 score, patient age, pretransplant bilirubin, ischemia time, and operative blood loss were not signifi
91 include both nonimmunologic (donor age, cold ischemia time, and recipient race) and immunologic facto
92 recipient and donor race and donor age, cold ischemia time, and the pretransplantation use of either
93 hat received a liver graft with a 16-hr cold ischemia time, and the survival rate was 83% after 5 day
94 fects of this system on graft survival, cold ischemia time, and the transplantation of highly sensiti
96 , use of anti-lymphocyte preparations, graft ischemia time, and year of transplant were evenly distri
98 ocured from older donors and had longer warm ischemia times, and consequently achieved higher utiliza
99 CD grafts are discarded because of long warm ischemia times, and the absence of reliable measure of k
102 rough rewarming) divided by calculated total ischemia time (approximate time of arrest [9-1-1 call or
108 mediation analysis was used to evaluate warm ischemia time as a potential mediator of this associatio
109 ican American ethnicity, donor age, and cold ischemia time as predictors of graft and patient surviva
110 .9) and warm (>50 minutes; P=0.003; HR=2.84) ischemia times as independent risk factors for HCC recur
111 Outcomes evaluated were operative and warm ischemia times, blood loss, donor complications, length
112 mplications, conversions, operative and warm ischemia times, blood loss, length of hospital stay, pai
113 er donor age, male donors, and a longer cold ischemia time but not donor terminal creatinine were ind
115 rectomy group had shorter operative and warm ischemia times by 52 minutes (P < 0.001) and 102 seconds
117 rs, whereas donor age, gender and race, cold ischemia time, cadaveric versus living donor, delay in i
119 non-AA donor (HR 1.66, P < 0.001), and cold ischemia time (CIT) (HR 1.03 per hour >8 hours, P = 0.03
120 ) and kidneys with longer than 30 hr of cold ischemia time (CIT) (OR, 0.95; per 5% increment; 95% CI,
122 cal findings, suboptimal biopsies, long cold ischemia time (CIT) and/or poor hypothermic perfusion pa
123 Cadaveric kidneys experiencing longer cold ischemia time (CIT) are associated with higher levels of
125 mulative recurrence curves according to cold ischemia time (CIT) at 2-hour intervals and warm ischemi
128 (40) and in multivariate analysis only cold ischemia time (CIT) longer than 8 hours (hazard ratio [H
129 zing "modifiable risk factors," such as cold ischemia time (CIT) recipient warm ischemia time (WIT) a
131 The potential exists for an increase in cold ischemia time (CIT) with resulting increases in delayed
133 iates in both groups, while donor race, cold ischemia time (CIT), female to male transplants, and rec
138 entage of transplanted ECD kidneys with cold ischemia times (CIT) <12 hr increased significantly; the
141 omena, such as donor death and possibly cold ischemia time, contributed to differences in complement
143 used to measure the relationships among cold ischemia time, delayed graft function, acute rejection,
145 dy more than 0%, cytomegalovirus D+/R-, cold ischemia time, delayed graft function, induction with an
147 st-transplant, allografts with a 6 hour cold-ischemia time developed extensive glomerular injury comp
148 antation model grafts subjected to long cold ischemia time developed severe TV with intimal hyperplas
149 es, including donor brain death, longer cold ischemia time, diabetogenic immunosuppression, and auto-
150 no-flow time, functional warm time, and cold ischemia time did not affect the risk of PNF or poor ren
152 o significant differences in donor age, cold ischemia time, digestion time, or weight of the pancreas
153 nel-reactive antibody level, HLA match, cold ischemia time, donor age, and expanded criteria donation
155 d include the vital importance of donor warm ischemia time (DWIT) on outcome for both recipients as w
156 us at transplantation, donor age, donor warm ischemia time (DWIT), and cold ischemia time (CIT).
162 art of surgery (25 vs. 77 min), shorter cold ischemia time for recovered pancreases (355 vs. 630 min)
163 nd-stage liver disease score, steatosis, and ischemia times for the peak or terminal serum sodium gro
164 In patients with embolization, the warm ischemia time (from embolization to removal of the graft
168 (HLA) mismatches, increased donor age, cold ischemia time greater than 24 hr, African American recip
169 ts, retransplant recipients, donor age, warm ischemia time greater than 30 minutes and cold ischemic
170 t, donor age greater than 55 years, and cold ischemia time greater than 550 minutes were significant
171 race, Kidney Donor Profile Index > 50%, cold ischemia time > 24 hours) and low-risk (not having any r
172 reactive, donation after cardiac death, cold ischemia time >12 hours, ICU stay >5 days, 3 or more pre
174 nor age >55 yr, non-heartbeating donor, cold ischemia time >36 h, and donor hypertension or diabetes
176 years), donor hospital stay (>5 days), cold ischemia time (>10 hours), and warm ischemia time (>40 m
177 3 months posttransplant were prolonged cold ischemia time (>36 hours, odds ratio [OR]=3.38 vs. 0-36
180 f sensitization, retransplantation, and cold ischemia time; however, EBK recipients were somewhat bet
181 correlation between apoptosis rate and cold ischemia time in CAD (r=0.86, P<0.001) renal allografts.
182 hat received a liver graft with a 16-hr cold ischemia time in Euro-Collins solution survived for more
184 reservation and baseline renal function over ischemia time in impacting post-partial nephrectomy func
185 4.6 years (range: 0.7-50), and the mean cold ischemia time in the cadaveric cases was 26.5+/-8.8 hr.
190 cute ischemia predicted by the acute cardiac ischemia time-insensitive predictive instrument (ACI-TIP
191 lities emerged in donor selection (age, cold ischemia time, intensive care unit length, amylase conce
196 d operative time, islet isolation time, warm ischemia time, islet equivalent (IE) counts, estimated b
198 specific antibody, negative crossmatch, warm ischemia time less than 60 min, absence of recipient spl
199 es, human leukocyte antigen antibodies, cold ischemia time, living donor, and preemptive transplantat
200 nefits of sustained euglycemia, shorter cold ischemia times, lower rates of sensitization, and early
203 I 1.23-2.02, P<0.001), and kidneys with cold ischemia time more than 24 hr (HR 1.31, 95% CI 1.04-1.65
204 CI 1.20-1.30, P=0.002) and kidneys with cold ischemia time more than 24 hr (HR 1.44, 95% CI 1.04-2.00
206 ed recipient BMI (P = 0.046), recipient warm ischemia time (odds ratio, OR, 1.032; 95% CI, 1.008-1.05
209 kidney from extended criteria donors, a cold ischemia time of more than 30 hr, time of surgical proce
216 associated with an increase (P>0.3) in total ischemia time, operative time, and packed red blood cell
218 s in recipient demographics, donor age, cold ischemia time, or total number of doses of Thymoglobulin
219 t times can impact logistics as well as cold ischemia time; our findings motivate an exploration of c
220 eduction in use of donors with extended cold ischemia time (p = 0.04) and private pay recipients (p =
223 e associated with shorter operative and warm ischemia times, patients undergoing laparoscopic nephrec
225 for planning surgery and also decreases cold ischemia time, potentially translating into a higher suc
226 reas after kidney recipients, prolonged cold-ischemia time, prolonged donor hypotension, non-heart-be
227 uate differential gene expression because of ischemia time, prostate samples were divided into five t
228 ge (r = -0.27662, p = 0.0016), cold and warm ischemia time (r = -0.25204, p = 0.0082; r = -0.19778, p
231 ble models, each controlling for donor type, ischemia time, recipient age, use of antilymphocyte agen
234 ffered in age, pretransplantation diagnosis, ischemia time, renal function, donor Toxoplasma serology
236 al anastomosis; use of ureteral stent; total ischemia time; serum creatinine on discharge; and need f
239 bility and thereby increase donor organ cold ischemia time that might then result in increased risk o
240 e U.S. study had a significantly longer cold ischemia time (the time elapsed between procurement of t
241 min (30-min warm ischemia time, 90-min cold ischemia time), the second kidney was removed (NHBD), fl
242 panel-reactive antibodies, and cold and warm ischemia time, the odds of oliguria were 1.60 (1.14 to 2
244 of 0-MM kidneys significantly increased cold ischemia time, the risk of graft loss was significantly
245 control groups were similar with respect to ischemia time, the size of the area at risk, and the eje
246 ctive antibody, delayed graft function, cold ischemia time, time since start of dialysis, etiology of
248 grafts were transplanted with a shorter cold ischemia time to more poorly HLA-matched recipients.
249 perioperative characteristics, such as warm ischemia time, to levels comparable to open surgery.
250 donor/recipient case-mix and increased cold ischemia times under the Kidney Allocation System (KAS),
254 hyma (influenced by surgical technique), and ischemia time (warm or cold) determines the ultimate fun
277 ventional group, although operative time and ischemia time was higher in minimally invasive group, th
280 vs. 3.0+/-0.7 hours, P <0.04), whereas warm ischemia time was shorter (3:55+/-1:47 vs. 4:55+/-0:55 m
282 xpressing either P-selectin or vWF, the cold ischemia time was significantly longer (885 +/- 123 min
283 rienced early acute rejection, the mean cold ischemia time was significantly longer than in allograft
288 because the additional costs of longer cold ischemia time were greater than the advantages of optimi
289 talization at time of OLT, and cold and warm ischemia time were independent predictors of survival.
290 Lactated Ringer's solution and 3-hr cold ischemia time were used for mechanistic investigations,
295 among the groups with the exception of cold ischemia time, which was longer in the MP group compared
296 ficant increase in door-to-balloon and total ischemia times, which may have contributed to the higher
298 h as cold ischemia time (CIT) recipient warm ischemia time (WIT) and the use of thrombolytic flush at
299 emia time (CIT) at 2-hour intervals and warm ischemia time (WIT) at 10-minute intervals showed that C
300 In the HCV+ cohort, recipient race, warm ischemia time (WIT), and diabetes also independently pre
301 inine excretion, TIMP-2/mOsm, and total warm ischemia time with an AUC of 0.85 (95% confidence interv