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1 e pigs underwent allogeneic PT with 16 hr of cold ischemia.
2 s, will protect liver grafts after prolonged cold ischemia.
3 kidney that had been subjected to 30 min of cold ischemia.
4 aft CD11c(+)F4/80(+) renal macrophages after cold ischemia.
5 Donor hearts were subjected to 2 hr of cold ischemia.
6 ere significantly altered by the duration of cold ischemia.
7 ver transplants despite prolonged periods of cold ischemia.
8 splantation (OLT) after prolonged periods of cold ischemia.
9 ospital length of stay despite longer kidney cold ischemia.
10 tissue exposed to a combination of warm and cold ischemia.
11 ge, donation after cardiac death, and longer cold ischemia.
12 recipients of transplants with over 24 hr of cold ischemia.
13 id cardioplegia with greater than 8 hours of cold ischemia.
14 GAD developed in isografts undergoing 4-hour cold ischemia.
15 ncrease glomerular pathology after prolonged cold ischemia.
16 d ischemia, warm ischemia, and combined warm+cold ischemia.
17 ograft glomerular injury caused by prolonged cold ischemia.
18 xpressed in human kidneys following extended cold ischemia.
19 and use of marginal livers, while minimizing cold ischemia.
20 th severe histological I/R injury and longer cold ischemia.
21 s as UW in our model of pig PT with 16 hr of cold ischemia.
23 Isolated lungs were exposed to 6 hours of cold ischemia (4 degrees C), followed by 2 hours of warm
25 By day 7 post-transplant, both control and cold ischemia allografts showed comparable expression of
28 nal sharing of liver allografts may increase cold ischemia and allograft failure, particularly with l
29 NMP can enable the reduction or avoidance of cold ischemia and allows for pretransplant measurement o
34 fusion injury but not injury associated with cold ischemia and reperfusion (preservation injury).
42 nditioning protects the liver from sustained cold ischemia and that tyrosine kinases are involved in
43 lationship was found between the duration of cold ischemia and the extent of complement-mediated tubu
45 etic donors had lower serum creatinine, less cold ischemia and these kidneys were less likely to be p
48 is caused by a combination of warm ischemia, cold ischemia, and hypertonic citrate during in situ pre
50 to 30 minutes of warm ischemia, 3.5 hours of cold ischemia, and then perfused with a humanized anti-C
53 fter harvest, the lungs underwent 6 hours of cold ischemia before being evaluated with EVLP for 4 hou
55 ntrast, in vessels exposed to more than 6 hr cold ischemia, both W6/32 antibody (30.4%+/-6.9%) and is
56 ntrast, in vessels exposed to more than 6 hr cold ischemia, both W6/32 antibody (30.4%T6.9%) and isot
57 d in human vessels exposed to more than 6 hr cold ischemia but only in the presence of antibody (P<0.
58 d in human vessels exposed to more than 6 hr cold ischemia but only in the presence of antibody (P<0.
59 f liver disease, retransplantation, warm and cold ischemia, but not graft type (whole, split, living-
61 demonstrates that in the clinical situation, cold ischemia causes platelet deposition and neutrophil
72 neys; (2) donor kidneys subjected to ex vivo cold ischemia (CI); (3) donor kidneys subjected to kidne
74 g islet function is exposure of pancreata to cold ischemia during unavoidable windows of preservation
79 early PSGL-1 blockade in rat liver models of cold ischemia, followed by ex vivo reperfusion or transp
80 -1 Ab prevented hepatic insult in a model of cold ischemia, followed by OLT, as assessed by 1) decrea
81 tive mechanical ventilation, (3) donor organ cold ischemia > or =12 hr, (4) preoperative serum creati
82 tension as cause of end-stage renal disease, cold ischemia >or=30 hours, and use of tacrolimus each i
84 the importance of controlling the degree of cold ischemia in clinical transplantation in an effort t
85 increase in tyrosine phosphorylation before cold ischemia in preconditioned grafts only, but not in
90 s suggest that older donor age and prolonged cold ischemia interact to increase liver allograft failu
94 come with little increase in the duration of cold ischemia justifies national sharing of HLA-matched
95 uded pretransplant dialysis duration, kidney cold ischemia, kidney donor risk index, and recipient hy
98 y performed in a clinically relevant ex vivo cold ischemia model is the first to provide the evidence
99 the interaction of age 45 years or more and cold ischemia more than or equal to 12 hr reached statis
100 livers from donors aged 45 years or more and cold ischemia more than or equal to 12 hr showed an adju
108 357), nor in lipid peroxidation during 16-hr cold ischemia (P=0.672), or reperfusion (P=0.185), but I
109 le grafts harvested after the same period of cold ischemia, partial grafts had eightfold more T-cell
110 -reperfusion injury, prolongs the acceptable cold ischemia period of lung grafts, and improves the fu
113 standing of the mechanism by which prolonged cold ischemia reduces immediate graft survival but also
114 tion, there was no significant difference in cold ischemia, rejection episodes, or patient or graft s
115 ow concentration provides protection against cold ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury after kidney tran
117 cific functional state of mitochondria after cold ischemia-reperfusion in a rat heart transplant mode
118 ntitative ultrasound scan, against prolonged cold ischemia-reperfusion injury (24 hours at 4 degrees
119 with warm CRS before implantation diminishes cold ischemia-reperfusion injury and improves the functi
120 warm ischemic time in addition to subsequent cold ischemia-reperfusion injury may result in damage to
126 partial grafts, and significantly decreased cold ischemia/reperfusion injury (P<0.05) and associated
128 ive efficacy of inhaled CO during intestinal cold ischemia/reperfusion injury associated with small i
131 d MHC-mismatched BALB/c kidney allografts to cold-ischemia storage for 0.5 or 6 hours before transpla
132 llografts subjected to 6 versus 0.5 hours of cold-ischemia storage had increased levels of anti-MHC c
133 chanisms underlying the effects of prolonged cold-ischemia storage on kidney allografts are poorly un
136 Under extreme conditions such as prolonged cold ischemia, these enzymes may be unable to adequately
137 ican race, Kidney Donor Profile Index > 50%, cold ischemia time > 24 hours) and low-risk (not having
138 HTLV reactive, donation after cardiac death, cold ischemia time >12 hours, ICU stay >5 days, 3 or mor
139 s: donor age >55 yr, non-heartbeating donor, cold ischemia time >36 h, and donor hypertension or diab
140 (>55 years), donor hospital stay (>5 days), cold ischemia time (>10 hours), and warm ischemia time (
141 ithin 3 months posttransplant were prolonged cold ischemia time (>36 hours, odds ratio [OR]=3.38 vs.
142 wait-time (571 vs. 471 days, P<0.01), longer cold ischemia time (22 vs. 20 hr, P<0.01), and donor and
143 l group, kidneys with diffuse GFT had longer cold ischemia time (34 versus 27 h), were more frequentl
145 ble to the effect of each hour of additional cold ischemia time (adjusted HR 1.04, 95% CI 1.02-1.05;
148 001), non-AA donor (HR 1.66, P < 0.001), and cold ischemia time (CIT) (HR 1.03 per hour >8 hours, P =
149 0.001) and kidneys with longer than 30 hr of cold ischemia time (CIT) (OR, 0.95; per 5% increment; 95
151 clinical findings, suboptimal biopsies, long cold ischemia time (CIT) and/or poor hypothermic perfusi
154 Cumulative recurrence curves according to cold ischemia time (CIT) at 2-hour intervals and warm is
157 as 4% (40) and in multivariate analysis only cold ischemia time (CIT) longer than 8 hours (hazard rat
158 ptimizing "modifiable risk factors," such as cold ischemia time (CIT) recipient warm ischemia time (W
160 The potential exists for an increase in cold ischemia time (CIT) with resulting increases in del
162 covariates in both groups, while donor race, cold ischemia time (CIT), female to male transplants, an
167 d a reduction in use of donors with extended cold ischemia time (p = 0.04) and private pay recipients
170 in the U.S. study had a significantly longer cold ischemia time (the time elapsed between procurement
171 being from donors after brain death (median cold ischemia time 33 +/- 36.9 hours) and 5 being from d
173 ations of kidneys with less than 12 hours of cold ischemia time and 74,997 dollars for those with mor
174 ible donors, and is associated with a longer cold ischemia time and a potentially higher rejection ra
177 uld be reallocated without delay to minimize cold ischemia time and maximize the utility of the graft
178 for the standard FXM, potentially shortening cold ischemia time and providing clinicians with unambig
182 prospective cross-match as a means to reduce cold ischemia time and the incidence of delayed graft fu
183 Improved patient selection and reduction in cold ischemia time appear to be contributing factors.
185 , African American ethnicity, donor age, and cold ischemia time as predictors of graft and patient su
186 , older donor age, male donors, and a longer cold ischemia time but not donor terminal creatinine wer
187 ansplantation model grafts subjected to long cold ischemia time developed severe TV with intimal hype
188 owed no-flow time, functional warm time, and cold ischemia time did not affect the risk of PNF or poo
191 in start of surgery (25 vs. 77 min), shorter cold ischemia time for recovered pancreases (355 vs. 630
193 tigen (HLA) mismatches, increased donor age, cold ischemia time greater than 24 hr, African American
194 xplant, donor age greater than 55 years, and cold ischemia time greater than 550 minutes were signifi
195 icant correlation between apoptosis rate and cold ischemia time in CAD (r=0.86, P<0.001) renal allogr
196 3+/-14.6 years (range: 0.7-50), and the mean cold ischemia time in the cadaveric cases was 26.5+/-8.8
199 95% CI 1.23-2.02, P<0.001), and kidneys with cold ischemia time more than 24 hr (HR 1.31, 95% CI 1.04
200 95% 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
202 SSI: kidney from extended criteria donors, a cold ischemia time of more than 30 hr, time of surgical
203 enal grafts were transplanted with a shorter cold ischemia time to more poorly HLA-matched recipients
217 ets expressing either P-selectin or vWF, the cold ischemia time was significantly longer (885 +/- 123
218 experienced early acute rejection, the mean cold ischemia time was significantly longer than in allo
222 r 120 min (30-min warm ischemia time, 90-min cold ischemia time), the second kidney was removed (NHBD
223 age Liver Disease score was 15 (IQR, 11-21); cold ischemia time, 8.0 hours (IQR, 6.4-9.7 hours); MEAF
224 ominal sepsis) and donor factors (donor age, cold ischemia time, and donor cytomegalovirus status), m
225 , human leukocyte antigen-B and DR mismatch, cold ischemia time, and double or en bloc transplant.
226 ransplanted, increment of insulin secretion, cold ischemia time, and exocrine tissue volume transplan
227 t to include both nonimmunologic (donor age, cold ischemia time, and recipient race) and immunologic
228 RA), recipient and donor race and donor age, cold ischemia time, and the pretransplantation use of ei
229 he effects of this system on graft survival, cold ischemia time, and the transplantation of highly se
232 phenomena, such as donor death and possibly cold ischemia time, contributed to differences in comple
233 ntibody more than 0%, cytomegalovirus D+/R-, cold ischemia time, delayed graft function, induction wi
234 erences, including donor brain death, longer cold ischemia time, diabetogenic immunosuppression, and
235 e, panel-reactive antibody level, HLA match, cold ischemia time, donor age, and expanded criteria don
236 facilities emerged in donor selection (age, cold ischemia time, intensive care unit length, amylase
237 matches, human leukocyte antigen antibodies, cold ischemia time, living donor, and preemptive transpl
239 groups in recipient demographics, donor age, cold ischemia time, or total number of doses of Thymoglo
240 ties for planning surgery and also decreases cold ischemia time, potentially translating into a highe
241 , local origin of procurement team, pancreas cold ischemia time, recipient cerebrovascular disease.
243 ring of 0-MM kidneys significantly increased cold ischemia time, the risk of graft loss was significa
244 l reactive antibody, delayed graft function, cold ischemia time, time since start of dialysis, etiolo
247 milar among the groups with the exception of cold ischemia time, which was longer in the MP group com
260 ree of sensitization, retransplantation, and cold ischemia time; however, EBK recipients were somewha
261 r wait times can impact logistics as well as cold ischemia time; our findings motivate an exploration
263 60 post-transplant, allografts with a 6 hour cold-ischemia time developed extensive glomerular injury
265 antibody titer, extent of HLA matching, and cold-ischemia time), and post-transplantation variables
267 pancreas after kidney recipients, prolonged cold-ischemia time, prolonged donor hypotension, non-hea
270 nce of delayed graft function (38% vs. 26%), cold ischemia times (12.9 vs. 13.5 hr), and graft surviv
272 percentage of transplanted ECD kidneys with cold ischemia times (CIT) <12 hr increased significantly
275 nal allocation variance designed to minimize cold ischemia times and encourage adoption of DCD protoc
276 ave focused on graft damage due to prolonged cold ischemia times and rewarming during the long benchi
277 early allograft dysfunction with increasing cold ischemia times and should be transplanted within 12
280 es in donor/recipient case-mix and increased cold ischemia times under the Kidney Allocation System (
284 n time (PT), retransplantation, and warm and cold ischemia times, were applied to the UNOS database.
287 IE in human vessels that are injured through cold ischemia via interaction with Fc-receptor-positive
288 P) content decay of mouse liver grafts after cold ischemia, warm ischemia, and combined warm+cold isc
290 ears, respectively, and the mean duration of cold ischemia was 23 hours and 22 hours, respectively.
298 een an urgent need to minimize both warm and cold ischemia, which often necessitates more rapid remov
299 solated from rabbit kidneys after 1-48 hr of cold ischemia with or without transplantation-reperfusio
300 dominal wall allograft substantially reduces cold ischemia without imposing constraints on the intest