The first organ transplant from a brain-dead donor
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Abstract
In 1968, publication of the Harvard committee’s report concerning “irreversible coma” established a paradigm for defining death by neurologic criteria (brain death [BD]). Five years earlier, Dr. Guy Alexandre, a Belgian surgeon, had not only adopted closely similar diagnostic criteria for BD but also applied those criteria in performing the first organ transplant from a brain-dead donor—a procedure many of his colleagues considered ethically unacceptable. To put those events into present-day perspective, the author reviewed the proceedings of a Ciba Symposium held in London in 1966 at which Alexandre introduced his pioneering view, obtaining information and documents from Alexandre and others who attended that meeting. Comparing Alexandre’s approach with the Harvard report and later advances helps in understanding how both defining death by brain criteria and transplanting organs from a brain-dead donor have become morally tolerable today.
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- The first organ transplant from a brain-dead donor
- Eelco F.M. Wijdicks, Division of Critical Care Neurology, Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905wijde@mayo.edu
Submitted July 19, 2005 - Reply to Wijdicks
- Calixto Machado, Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Apartado Postal 4268, La Habana 10400, Cubabraind@infomed.sld.cu
Submitted July 19, 2005
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