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1 expression of VEGF in a mouse model of liver warm ischemia.
2 preservation of kidneys exposed to 60 min of warm ischemia.
3 pMRI, are biomarkers of kidney injury after warm ischemia.
4 ve endothelial structure and function during warm ischemia.
5 HBD), thereby improving function with longer warm ischemia.
6 roups were subjected to approximately 70 min warm ischemia.
7 use liver dysfunction after cold storage and warm ischemia.
8 an shortage, but they inherently suffer from warm ischemia.
9 volume before and after a 7-minute period of warm ischemia.
10 lipid peroxidation occurs in this model with warm ischemia.
11 to potentially damaging conditions, such as warm ischemia.
12 oblems often worsen the dangerous effects of warm ischemia.
13 = 30) sustained either minimal or 75 min of warm ischemia.
14 uctions can be performed ex situ, minimizing warm ischemia.
15 ld good results in DCD livers with prolonged warm ischemia.
16 aluate LEEDR compared to prolonged untreated warm ischemia.
17 on after circulatory deaths, with 4.5-5 h of warm ischemia.
18 on fall to less than 10% after 30 minutes of warm ischemia.
19 of kidney grafts associated with substantial warm ischemia.
20 lly relevant 2-hour cold ischemia and 1-hour warm ischemia.
21 important roles in mitigating the effects of warm ischemia.
22 ection of DCD grafts and clear definition of warm ischemia.
23 g systemic injury, hepatotoxin exposure, and warm ischemia.
25 ular EVLP for 2 hours after a combination of warm ischemia (20-420 min) and cold ischemia (120-600 mi
26 s, P < 0.001), with shorter functional donor warm ischemia (22 vs 31 minutes, P < 0.001) and a lower
27 l allografts were subjected to 30 minutes of warm ischemia, 3.5 hours of cold ischemia, and then perf
30 were exposed to 0, 60, or 75 min of in situ warm ischemia (37 degrees C), followed by 24 to 72 hr pr
32 WT) controls were subjected to partial liver warm ischemia (90 minutes) followed by reperfusion (1-6
33 an established mouse model of partial liver warm ischemia (90 minutes) followed by reperfusion (6 ho
36 eath leads to vascular damage as a result of warm ischemia, affecting renovascular circulating volume
38 underwent sham operation (n=9), or 45 min of warm ischemia and 10 min of reperfusion with U74389G (6
40 After these kidneys had sustained 30 min of warm ischemia and 24 h of oxygenated HMP, they were eith
46 Porcine kidneys were retrieved after 10-min warm ischemia and flushed with 500 mL hyperosmolar citra
49 Criteria for matching included duration of warm ischemia and key confounders summarized in the bala
51 sed in two distinct animal models of hepatic warm ischemia and orthotopic liver transplantation (hypo
52 om male Lewis rats were subjected to 1 hr of warm ischemia and preserved with 5 hr of SCS or NELP, an
53 +/-40 kg pigs were exposed to 30 minutes of warm ischemia and randomized to receive 22-hour HMP with
56 mucosal damage that occurs after intestinal warm ischemia and reperfusion and its recovery, little i
61 ceived normal saline, the sham group without warm ischemia and the experimental groups, which receive
62 rcine livers were subjected to 60 minutes of warm ischemia and then assigned to the following groups:
63 orcine kidneys were exposed to 30 minutes of warm ischemia and then reimplanted following either 16 h
64 t the immediate-function kidneys had shorter warm ischemia and total preservation times compared with
66 emia-reperfusion injury model (predominantly warm ischemia) and a kidney transplantation model (predo
67 th ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) (45-min warm ischemia), and rats subjected to acute cyclosporine
68 rfused hearts were subjected to 5 minutes of warm ischemia, and at 5, 10, and 15 minutes after initia
72 eservation solution extends the tolerance to warm ischemia, and may reduce the rate of ischemic chola
76 donors after circulatory death (DCD) suffer warm ischemia before cold storage which may prejudice gr
77 f donor liver grafts to prolonged periods of warm ischemia before procurement causes injuries includi
80 D, pig kidneys underwent 0, 30, or 60 min of warm ischemia, before hypothermic machine perfusion.
81 erformed in 15 patients without the need for warm ischemia by utilizing pharmalogically induced hypot
83 late that this is caused by a combination of warm ischemia, cold ischemia, and hypertonic citrate dur
84 g) underwent left nephrectomy with 30 min of warm ischemia, Collins C-4 flush, and 24 hr of cold stor
86 etting of a solitary kidney, every minute of warm ischemia counts and ischemia is an important modifi
87 livers were subjected to 30 min of asystolic warm ischemia (DCD), followed by 2 h of either static co
88 o (odds ratio, 0.20; P = 0.008) and arterial warm ischemia duration (odds ratio, 1.05; P = 0.008).
90 undergo apoptosis after 60 to 120 minutes of warm ischemia followed by 0 to 24 hours of reperfusion.
91 Porcine kidneys were subjected to 10 min of warm ischemia followed by 18 hr of static cold storage w
95 served livers that had experienced 30 min of warm ischemia followed by a 10 hr preservation period.
96 erved tissues that had experienced 30 min of warm ischemia followed by a 5-hr preservation period wit
97 nephrectomized rats that underwent 60 min of warm ischemia followed by a 72-hr reperfusion interval w
100 from an abattoir were subjected to 30 min of warm ischemia, followed by 3 h of hypothermic oxygenated
102 he slight deterioration seen when increasing warm ischemia from 1 to 2 hr, significantly improving tr
104 -hr preservation of kidneys not subjected to warm ischemia (heart-beating donor model), but there was
105 ctively mitigated the consequences of 9 h of warm ischemia in a swine model, improving survival, pres
106 risk profile resulting from the longer donor warm ischemia in Italy (40 versus 18 min; P < 0.001).
108 However, all rats with 120 min (n=8) liver warm ischemia in splenic-caval shunt group survived for
109 ecipient age + 0.816 log creatinine + 0.0044 warm ischemia (in minutes) + 0.659 (if second transplant
110 reduce and limit the impact of the prolonged warm ischemia inherent to the uDCD process, and to deal
113 ted inflammatory responses in models of both warm ischemia (kidney clamping) and prolonged cold ische
120 A total of 67% of rats with 45 min liver warm ischemia (n=6) and 100% of rats with 60 min liver w
122 estigated in porcine livers with minimal (no warm ischemia, n = 5) or severe injury (60 min warm isch
126 n Lewis and Fischer 344 rats after 45 min of warm ischemia of a single kidney and with or without con
128 rcine kidneys were exposed to either minimal warm ischemia or 75 min of warm ischemia (n = 30 per gro
129 eased in human donor lungs starting from the warm-ischemia phase and were associated with increased t
135 a +/-40 kg pig was exposed to 30 minutes of warm ischemia prior to 22 hours of HMP and autotransplan
138 reconditioned with whole liver radiation and warm ischemia-reperfusion followed by intrasplenic trans
139 rge animals for protecting the liver against warm ischemia-reperfusion injury but not injury associat
140 hat calpain proteases play a pivotal role in warm ischemia-reperfusion injury of the rat liver throug
142 rough repeated CI during torpor, followed by warm ischemia/reperfusion (WI) during interbout arousal
143 d play an important role in limiting hepatic warm ischemia/reperfusion (WI/Rp) injury, probably throu
145 characterized models of acute kidney injury; warm ischemia/reperfusion and folic acid injection were
146 meliorates fatty livers and protects against warm ischemia/reperfusion fatty liver injury, suggesting
151 ing HPP of kidneys subjected to preretrieval warm ischemia resulted in a normalization of GFR measure
154 ys of C57BL/6 mice that underwent unilateral warm ischemia revealed nine miRNAs (miR-21, miR-20a, miR
156 mic shunt enhances the tolerance of liver to warm ischemia through the protective role of iNOS and nu
158 Risk factors for DGF included functional warm ischemia time >40 min, dialysis >2 y, recipient bod
161 me (mean, 159 vs. 188 min; P<0.001), shorter warm ischemia time (2 vs. 5 min; P<0.001) and a lower in
162 ighted include the vital importance of donor warm ischemia time (DWIT) on outcome for both recipients
163 status at transplantation, donor age, donor warm ischemia time (DWIT), and cold ischemia time (CIT).
164 e additional ischemic event during the donor warm ischemia time (DWIT), DCD grafts carry an increased
167 ntified recipient BMI (P = 0.046), recipient warm ischemia time (odds ratio, OR, 1.032; 95% CI, 1.008
168 ent age (r = -0.27662, p = 0.0016), cold and warm ischemia time (r = -0.25204, p = 0.0082; r = -0.197
171 " such as cold ischemia time (CIT) recipient warm ischemia time (WIT) and the use of thrombolytic flu
172 ischemia time (CIT) at 2-hour intervals and warm ischemia time (WIT) at 10-minute intervals showed t
173 imated blood loss (EBL) greater than 500 mL, warm ischemia time (WIT) greater than 30 minutes, positi
175 ive time (210 versus 195 min; P = 0.011) and warm ischemia time (WIT; 230 versus 180 s; P < 0.001) we
176 Median operative time was 159 (54) minutes, warm ischemia time 180 (90) seconds, estimated blood los
177 sults are as follows: operative time 4.5 hr, warm ischemia time 25 min, and blood transfused (packed
178 es, estimated blood loss 344.2 +/- 690.3 mL, warm ischemia time 4.9 +/- 3.4 minutes, and donor length
179 n after circulatory death (DCD, n = 36, mean warm ischemia time = 2 min) and donation after brain dea
181 The donor organ was subjected to 1 hour of warm ischemia time after circulatory cessation, then flu
184 analyzed following challenge with 45 min of warm ischemia time and either 4 h of reperfusion or 24 h
187 cases showed no significant differences for warm ischemia time and other donor outcomes, delayed gra
189 usal mediation analysis was used to evaluate warm ischemia time as a potential mediator of this assoc
191 atients, retransplant recipients, donor age, warm ischemia time greater than 30 minutes and cold isch
192 , 1.23-2.83; P = 0.003); however, functional warm ischemia time had no impact (hazard ratio, 1.00; 95
195 clinical phase, the length of the functional warm ischemia time in the donation process was inversely
196 onor-specific antibody, negative crossmatch, warm ischemia time less than 60 min, absence of recipien
215 /-0.7 vs. 3.0+/-0.7 hours, P <0.04), whereas warm ischemia time was shorter (3:55+/-1:47 vs. 4:55+/-0
219 aining treatment to asystole, and functional warm ischemia time was the time from donor systolic bloo
220 hospitalization at time of OLT, and cold and warm ischemia time were independent predictors of surviv
221 s, improving renal cooling or shortening the warm ischemia time will expand its indications further.
222 creatinine excretion, TIMP-2/mOsm, and total warm ischemia time with an AUC of 0.85 (95% confidence i
223 After remaining in situ for 120 min (30-min warm ischemia time, 90-min cold ischemia time), the seco
225 Graft survival is affected by donor gender, warm ischemia time, and pretransplant patient condition.
226 ewithdrawal preparation, definition of donor warm ischemia time, DCD surgical technique, combined tho
227 etwork for Organ Sharing (UNOS) status, cold/warm ischemia time, intraoperative blood loss, and occur
228 cluded operative time, islet isolation time, warm ischemia time, islet equivalent (IE) counts, estima
232 sis, panel-reactive antibodies, and cold and warm ischemia time, the odds of oliguria were 1.60 (1.14
233 prove perioperative characteristics, such as warm ischemia time, to levels comparable to open surgery
241 operative times (TOT) (324 vs. 344 min) and warm ischemia times (WIT) (28 vs. 31 min) in the 45-90 g
242 d hypothermia should be considered if longer warm ischemia times are anticipated (i.e. >25 min).
243 nephrectomy group had shorter operative and warm ischemia times by 52 minutes (P < 0.001) and 102 se
247 re procured from older donors and had longer warm ischemia times, and consequently achieved higher ut
248 any DCD grafts are discarded because of long warm ischemia times, and the absence of reliable measure
250 ve complications, conversions, operative and warm ischemia times, blood loss, length of hospital stay
251 may be associated with shorter operative and warm ischemia times, patients undergoing laparoscopic ne
257 the first time from organ retrieval, through warm ischemia, transportation on ice, right through to c
265 er transplantation, livers exposed to 15' of warm ischemia were either modulated (N = 6) with a flush
266 -two porcine kidneys presenting up to 90 min warm ischemia were perfused with oxygenation at 4 degree
269 e (GFR) of kidneys subjected to preretrieval warm ischemia when measured in situ at 2 weeks after tra
270 liver tissue that has experienced 30 min of warm ischemia, when compared with simple cold storage.
271 DCD kidneys have increased caspase-1 due to warm ischemia (WI) and increased caspase-3 and apoptosis
275 on reperfusion in line with the duration of warm ischemia with a concomitant rise in the vasoconstri
276 subjected to 45, 60, 120, and 150 min liver warm ischemia with or without portosystemic shunt (splen
277 gly increased in the hepatocytes after liver warm ischemia with portosystemic shunt, compared with li
278 circulatory deaths (uDCD), with up to 4-5 h warm ischemia, without advanced cardiopulmonary resuscit