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Circulatory Arrest in a Brain-Dead Organ Donor: Is the Use of Cardiac Compression Permissible?
Brian Cummings, MD1*,
Natan Noviski, MD2,
Michael P. Moreland, JD3,
and
John J. Paris, Ph.D.4
1 Department of Pediatrics
2 Chief, Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
3 Villanova University School of Law
4 Walsh Professor of Bioethics
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bmcummings{at}partners.org.
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Abstract |
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Care of the brain-dead patient is common in intensive care practice. Aggressive donor management is advocated to increase supply of viable organs. Significant controversy exists over cardiac resuscitation in patients determined dead by cardiac criteria. The issue, till now, has not been addressed in brain dead patients. We discuss a case of cardiac resuscitation of a brain-dead donor to ensure organ donation. This case allows us to examine the use of brain death criteria to declare death, the controversy regarding cardiac resuscitation in organ donor patients, and the standards for use of cardiac resuscitation in the organ donor declared dead by brain death criteria. The consent process for organ donation in brain dead patients should address the possibility of subsequent cardiac arrest.
First published on October 21, 2009, doi:10.1177/0885066609344955
Journal of Intensive Care Medicine 2009;24:389.
A more recent version of this article appeared on November 1, 2009

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