Device keeps hearts beating on their way to transplant

Updated
Device Keeps Hearts Beating on Their Way to Transplant
Device Keeps Hearts Beating on Their Way to Transplant


Heart transplants usually come from brain-dead donors. That's because doctors have long said a heart taken from a deceased patient can be too damaged or deteriorated by the time they can get to it.

Enter the so-called "heart in a box" from TransMedics, a device that connects a heart to an oxygen and nutrient supply. Doctors say it could make a big difference in how many viable hearts could be eligible for transplants.

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Experts say the donated heart supply could go up by as much as 30 percent, according to an article in MIT Technology Review. That's a big deal, because advanced heart failure affects more than half a million Americans.

Without the device, a heart had to reach its new host within six hours. With the device, that window doubles.

TransMedics' device actually revives stopped hearts, and keeps them warm and beating.

No only is it expensive at $250,000, though, but it raises ethical questions. For example, how long should doctors wait after a donor dies to remove the heart?

There have reportedly been at least 15 successful transplants in the U.K. and Australia using the "heart in a box" device. In the U.S. though, it's still awaiting approval.

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