‘Heart In A Box’ Invention

Plain Dealer:

The problem: Hearts for transplant must be transported from donor to recipient within about four hours before complications begin to develop. The hearts are placed on ice inside picnic coolers for the drive or flight from one hospital to another. That means traffic jams, bad weather and mechanical problems can cause such serious delays that a heart ends up being wasted. It means the heart can be damaged when it’s warmed up at the end of the surgery. And it means the heart can’t be put through a battery of tests to see how well it works until after it’s been transplanted. That’s a big problem for patients receiving new hearts. Five percent to 7 percent of hearts end up not working after they’ve been transplanted. Those patients have to undergo major surgery again — and risk death — sometimes days after the original surgery.

The solution: Heart in a Box. You might have seen it on an episode of “Grey’s Anatomy” and thought it was fantasy. But it’s in use in Europe. And Heart in a Box, formally known as the Organ Care System, is being tested in eight hospitals in the United States, including the Cleveland Clinic, to see if it works well enough to be approved by the FDA.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *