Intensive care for organ preservation: A four-stage pathway.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_6EC56713D6D1
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Intensive care for organ preservation: A four-stage pathway.
Journal
Journal of the Intensive Care Society
ISSN
1751-1437 (Print)
ISSN-L
1751-1437
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
20
Number
4
Pages
335-340
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Intensive care for organ preservation (ICOP) is defined as the initiation or pursuit of intensive care not to save the patient's life, but to protect and optimize organs for transplantation.
When a patient has devastating brain injury that might progress to organ donation this can be conceptualized as evolving through four consecutive stages: (1) instability, (2) stability, (3) futility and (4) finality. ICOP might be applied at any of these stages, raising different ethical issues. Only in the stage of finality is the switch from neurointensive care to ICOP ethically justified.
The difference between the stages is that during instability, stability and futility the focus must be neurointensive care which seeks the patient's recovery or an accurate neurological prognostication, while finality focuses on withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy and commencement of comfort care, which may include ICOP for deceased donation.
When a patient has devastating brain injury that might progress to organ donation this can be conceptualized as evolving through four consecutive stages: (1) instability, (2) stability, (3) futility and (4) finality. ICOP might be applied at any of these stages, raising different ethical issues. Only in the stage of finality is the switch from neurointensive care to ICOP ethically justified.
The difference between the stages is that during instability, stability and futility the focus must be neurointensive care which seeks the patient's recovery or an accurate neurological prognostication, while finality focuses on withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy and commencement of comfort care, which may include ICOP for deceased donation.
Keywords
Critical Care, Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine, Transplantation, brain death, ethics, intensive care, organ donation, organ preservation
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/09/2019 14:18
Last modification date
08/11/2019 6:10