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1.
Transplant Proc ; 37(9): 3667-8, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16386499

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Human organs for transplant from a deceased donor are presently distributed in Spain by means of manual handling and telephone or fax transmission of data. This procedure is conducted organ by organ with the information transmitted sequentially. This process has several inherent drawbacks, the main one being the long length of time to allocate organs on many occasions. A difficulty of this type could be solved by means of an electronic system of data management and transmission through the Internet. CARREL is a platform that could provide an alternative organ distribution procedure. The main objective of CARREL was to increase the efficiency, safety, rapidity, and quality of organ distribution for transplantation, thereby helping the allocation process. MATERIALS AND METHODS: CARREL is a database system, accessible through the Internet, to which any medical center authorized to perform organ transplants in Spain may subscribe. CARREL allows information share between centers, including administrative, anthropometric, immunological, analytical, and clinical data, as well as parameters concerning donor maintenance. CONCLUSIONS: CARREL is an online system that can reduce organ distribution time, directly store complete information concerning the donor, and also share data between centers. It facilitates communication between transplant coordinators at different centers, thereby improving and hastening candidate selection.


Subject(s)
Internet , Organ Transplantation/statistics & numerical data , Tissue and Organ Procurement/organization & administration , Databases, Factual , Humans , Online Systems , Organ Transplantation/standards
2.
Transplant Proc ; 37(9): 4084-6, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16386632

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Until recently, all cornea information at our tissue bank was managed manually, no specific database or computer tool had been implemented to provide electronic versions of documents and medical reports. The main objective of the BanTeC project was therefore to create a computerized system to integrate and classify all the information and documents used in the center in order to facilitate management of retrieved, transplanted corneal tissues. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used the Windows platform to develop the project. Microsoft Access and Microsoft Jet Engine were used at the database level and Data Access Objects was the chosen data access technology. CONCLUSIONS: In short, the BanTeC software seeks to computerize the tissue bank. All the initial stages of the development have now been completed, from specification of needs, program design and implementation of the software components, to the total integration of the final result in the real production environment. BanTeC will allow the generation of statistical reports for analysis to improve our performance.


Subject(s)
Corneal Transplantation/instrumentation , Software , Corneal Transplantation/methods , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Spain
3.
Transplant Proc ; 35(5): 2031-5, 2003 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12962886

ABSTRACT

Amniotic membrane transplantation has been used for >90 years for cutaneous and mucous lesions for regeneration of tissues. In recent years its effectiveness has been demonstrated in the treatment of diseases of the ocular surface. We present our experience with 53 amniotic membrane transplantations for different ocular pathologies with two different forms of implantation. The 53 cases were divided into three groups according to pathology and type of implant. Group 1 included 24 eyes with amniotic membrane grafts after resection of extensive conjunctival lesions. Group 2 included 19 eyes with amniotic membrane grafts for corneal pathology, and group 3 consisted of 10 eyes with amniotic membrane patches for corneal epithelial defects without ulceration. No intra- or postoperative complications were observed during an average follow-up period of 32 months (24-48 months). Group 1 demonstrated rapid healing of the lesions with minimal scarring in all cases. In group 2 a favorable response was observed in 16 of 19 cases. In group 3 complete healing was achieved in only 3 of 10 cases, and the time for which the graft remained was related to the success of the treatment. The primary intention was to achieve prolonged fixation of the implant. Finally, amniotic membrane transplantation is a safe and effective technique for the treatment of different pathologies of the ocular surface. After the resection of extensive conjunctival lesions it is currently the preferred treatment. In corneal pathology, it represents an additional therapeutic alternative when conservative medical treatments fail.


Subject(s)
Amnion/transplantation , Conjunctival Diseases/surgery , Corneal Diseases/surgery , Epithelial Cells/pathology , Epithelium, Corneal/pathology , Female , Humans , Mucous Membrane/physiology , Placenta , Pregnancy , Regeneration , Skin Physiological Phenomena
4.
Artif Intell Med ; 27(3): 233-58, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12667738

ABSTRACT

The use of multi-agent systems (MAS) in health-care domains is increasing. Such agent-mediated medical systems can manage complex tasks and have the potential to adapt gracefully to unexpected events. However, in these kinds of systems the issues of privacy, security and trust are particularly sensitive in relation to matters such as agents' access to patient records, what is acceptable behaviour for an agent in a particular role and the development of trust both between (heterogeneous) agents and between users and agents. To address these issues we propose a formal normative framework, deriving from and developing the notion of an electronic institution. Such institutions provide a framework to define and police norms that guide, control and regulate the behaviour of the heterogeneous agents that participate in the institution. These norms define the acceptable actions that each agent may perform depending on the role or roles it is playing, and clearly specifies the data it may access and/or modify in playing those roles. In this paper, we present the formalization of Carrel, a virtual organization for the procurement of organs and tissues for transplantation purposes, as an electronic institution using the ISLANDER institution specification language as formalizing languages. We demonstrate aspects of the formalization of such an institution, example fragments in the language used for the textual specification, and how such formalization can be used as a blueprint in the implementation of the final agent architecture, through techniques such as skeleton generation.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Confidentiality , Software , Tissue Banks , Tissue and Organ Procurement , Decision Making, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Negotiating
5.
Transplantation ; 73(10): 1673-5, 2002 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12042658

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: To date, few data are available on older donor renal grafts transplanted into young recipients. We compare 63 kidneys grafts from donors older than 60 years transplanted into recipients younger than 60 years (group 1) with a control group of 235 patients in whom both recipients and donors were younger than 60 years (group 2). RESULTS: Patient survival rates at 1 and 5 years, respectively, were 98% and 95% (group 1) and 95% and 84% (group 2) (P=0.01). Graft survival rates were 95% and 83% in group 1 versus 94% and 81% in group 2, although death censoring was significant (100% and 98% group 1 vs. 96% and 86% group 2, P=0.04). In group 1, plasmatic creatinemia was significantly higher. The aged donor, female donor-male recipient combination, and the presence of acute rejection alone or together with acute tubular necrosis, were determinants for worse renal functioning at 1 year after transplantation. Seven patients had chronic nephropathy not related to any clinical parameter. CONCLUSION: We conclude that kidneys from older donors can be successfully transplanted to younger patients.


Subject(s)
Graft Survival/physiology , Kidney Transplantation/physiology , Tissue Donors/statistics & numerical data , Age Distribution , Age Factors , Creatinine/blood , Disease-Free Survival , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Graft Rejection/epidemiology , Humans , Kidney Transplantation/immunology , Kidney Transplantation/mortality , Male , Middle Aged , Postoperative Complications/classification , Survival Rate , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
6.
Clin Transplant ; 16(3): 151-62, 2002 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12010136

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The shortage of organs for transplantation has made it necessary to extend the criteria for the selection of donors, among others including those patients who die because of toxic substances such as methanol. Methanol is a toxic which is distributed through all the systems and viscera of the organism and tends to cause a severe metabolic acidosis. It can specifically cause serious or irreversible lesions of the central nervous system (CNS) and retina, and ultimately brain death. We present our experience with 16 organ donors who died as a result of acute methanol intoxication in 10 Spanish hospitals over the last 14 yr. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between October 1985 and July 1999, 16 organ donors with brain death caused by acute methanol intoxication, 13 females and three males with a mean age of 38.4 +/- 7.6 yr (interval: 26-55 yr), allowed 37 elective transplants to be performed: 29 kidneys, four hearts and four livers for 37 recipients, and one urgent liver transplantation to a recipient with fulminant hepatitis. RESULTS: The immediate postoperative period was favourable for the 38 graft recipients. None of the graft recipients presented gap anion metabolic acidosis in the immediate postoperative period, nor symptomatology or lesions of the CNS characteristic of methanol intoxication. Two patients died during the first month post-transplantation, a liver recipient and a heart recipient, at 16 and 24 days, respectively, because of acute rejection of the graft. At 1 month after transplantation 35 of the 36 recipients had been discharged from hospital with normal-functioning grafts. The last of the recipients, a kidney recipient, was discharged at 6 wk with normal-functioning graft. Actuarial survival of the graft and patient of kidney recipients at 1, 3 and 5 yr was 92.6, 77.8, and 75%, and 100, 88.9 and 83.3%, respectively; with average serum creatinines of 139.9 +/- 42.9, 150.4 +/- 42.8, and 164.4 +/- 82.5 micromol/L, respectively. At 1 yr after transplantation the three heart recipients and two of the three liver recipients had normal-functioning graft. CONCLUSIONS: Methanol intoxication is not transferred from the donor to the recipient. The survival of the graft and kidney, heart and liver recipients using organs from donors who die because of methanol does not differ in the short- and long-term from the transplants performed with organs from donors who die from other causes.


Subject(s)
Methanol/poisoning , Organ Transplantation , Tissue Donors , Adult , Contraindications , Female , Heart Transplantation , Humans , Kidney Transplantation , Liver Transplantation , Male , Middle Aged , Treatment Outcome
13.
Dermatology ; 202(1): 27-30, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11244224

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: It has been suggested that the use of sunscreens to prevent skin cancer may put the population at risk of vitamin D deficiency, which in turn may lead to secondary hyperparathyroidism, loss of cortical bone and, ultimately, osteoporotic fractures. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether sunscreen SPF15 may lead to loss of bone mass. METHODS: We followed 10 sunscreen users and 18 controls over 2 years, including two summers, two winters and a basal period (winter). Bone mass was evaluated each season with dual x-ray absorptiometry. RESULTS: During follow-up, mild fluctuations in bone mass could be seen at Ward's site in both groups, without a definitive pattern. At the final visit, no significant loss of bone mass was observed in sunscreen users or in the control group. We did not observe any significant differences between groups throughout the study. CONCLUSION: Although the study samples in this work are small, and a slight variation in bone mass may not be detected, in a clinical setting, sunscreen SPF15 protection does not seem to increase the risk of osteoporosis.


Subject(s)
Osteoporosis/etiology , Sunscreening Agents/pharmacology , Aged , Bone Density/drug effects , Bone and Bones/drug effects , Bone and Bones/metabolism , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Middle Aged , Risk Factors , Seasons , Sunscreening Agents/adverse effects
14.
Transplantation ; 70(1): 131-5, 2000 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10919589

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Among the main causes for the relatively small number of organ donors, the delay in the diagnosis of brain death plays a major role. Administration of drugs causing central nervous system (CNS) depression prevents diagnosis of brain death by clinical and electroencephalographic criteria until serum clearance of the drug has occurred. Confirming brain death by demonstrating persistent intracranial circulatory arrest might decrease the length of the diagnostic process. We have carried out a prospective study to investigate whether 99 mTc-hexamethyl propylenamino oxime (99mTc-HMPAO) brain scintigraphy and/or transcranial Doppler ultrasound can speed up the diagnosis of brain death in patients treated with CNS depressant drugs. METHODS: All 138 consecutive patients with severe brain lesion that progressed to brain death in our center between January 1994 and December 1996 were controlled. Of them, 36 patients aged 1 to 65 years old (mean=25.6+/-18.3 years) who met clinical and EEG criteria for the diagnosis of brain death, except for the presence of significant serum levels of barbiturates (n=34), opiates (n=8), and benzodiazepines (n=3) were distributed in three groups according to the confirmatory test used; group 1: waiting for the metabolic clearance of CNS depressant drugs, or by demonstrating intracranial circulatory arrest with 99mTc-HMPAO (group 2) or transcranial Doppler (group 3). The delay in diagnosing brain death by the three methods was analyzed. RESULTS: The mean interval between the presumptive and the definitive diagnosis of brain death was 34.4+/-32.2 hr in group 1, 17.7+/-18.3 hr in group 2, and 5.0+/-4.6 hr in group 3 (P=0.004). The between-groups analysis showed that 99mTc-HMPAO and transcranial Doppler decreased the delay in diagnosing brain death with respect to waiting for drug clearance by 49% (P=0.16) and 85% (P<0.001), respectively. Moreover, transcranial Doppler decreased this time by 72% with respect to 99mTc-HMPAO (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Transcranial Doppler ultrasound and 99mTc-HMPAO brain scintigraphy can significantly reduce the time taken to confirm brain death in patients with significant serum levels of CNS depressant drugs. In this setting, transcranial Doppler is superior to 99mTc-HMPAO in reducing the waiting time for a firm diagnosis of brain death.


Subject(s)
Brain Death/diagnosis , Central Nervous System Depressants/pharmacology , Echoencephalography , Technetium Tc 99m Exametazime , Ultrasonography, Doppler , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Central Nervous System Depressants/pharmacokinetics , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Metabolic Clearance Rate , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Radionuclide Imaging
17.
Neurology ; 54(1): 224-7, 2000 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10636154

ABSTRACT

Complex spinal cord, spontaneous, or upper limb reflexes are rarely observed in brain death. The authors describe two brain-dead heart-beating cadavers (out of 400 consecutive cases in their hospital in the past 9 years) that, immediately after brain-death diagnosis, exhibited symmetric upper limb movements resembling decerebrate posture that were triggered by each mechanical pulmonary insufflation, and also by superficial pressure and noxious stimuli applied to the arms, thorax, or abdomen. These movements persisted until disconnection from mechanical ventilation.


Subject(s)
Brain Death/physiopathology , Decerebrate State/physiopathology , Movement , Respiration, Artificial , Adult , Brain Death/diagnosis , Electroencephalography , Female , Hemodynamics , Humans , Infant , Male , Physical Stimulation
20.
Neurology ; 53(6): 1369; author reply 1371-2, 1999 Oct 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10522910
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