Specialists from the Medical University of Warsaw performed Poland’s first liver transplantation using an extracorporeal perfusion device in normothermic conditions. This is a revolution in transplantology, specialists emphasise in the Medical University of Warsaw press release sent to PAP.
The Liver Assist device, a relatively new solution in transplantology, keeps the organ harvested for transplantation from a deceased donor at a temperature of 36 degrees. At the same time, it provides perfusion in normothermic conditions. Perfusion is achieved by placing the liver in a special machine that allows to recreate the blood flow in the organ and observe how it functions outside the human body.
Thanks to this, before transplantation, doctors can make sure that the liver functions properly and is definitely suitable for transplantation, emphasize specialists from the Medical University of Warsaw in the release sent to PAP.
The liver transplantation procedure was performed by a team of surgeons under the supervision of Professor Michał Grąt at the Chair and Department of General, Transplant and Liver Surgery of the Medical University of Warsaw.
The procedure of organ harvesting and normothermic perfusion was performed by a team consisting of: Marcin Morawski, Jan Stypułkowski, Mateusz Bartowiak, Andrey Zhylko and Marzena Kaczmarska under the supervision of Professor Michał Grąt.
The liver transplantation was performed by Professor Michał Grąt, Dr. Maciej Krasnodębski and Adam Bołtuć, and hepatectomy was performed by Dr. Ireneusz Grzelak, Dr. Łukasz Masior and Dr. Marcin Rychter, assisted by nurses Anna Wąsik and Joanna Stasiak. Anaesthesia was performed by Dr. Paula Dudek, assisted by anaesthesiology nurses Joanna Kosińska and Jan Szymborski. The entire procedure was coordinated by Krzysztof Zając.
After collection from the donor, the liver was transported to the transplant centre in the conditions of cold ischaemia, at 4 degrees Celsius. When it arrived at she reached the Medical University of Warsaw clinic, it was placed in a perfusion machine.
Function failure is one of the most dangerous complications after transplantation and a direct threat to the patient’s life.