Word: transplanter
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...TRANSPLANTS Questions of the Heart History's first transplant of a heart, from a chimpanzee to a dying man (TIME, Jan. 31), was a significant surgical achievement. But the difficulties that surrounded the operation, say University of Mississippi Surgeon James D. Hardy and his colleagues, were more than problems of cutting and suturing. What bothered the doctors as much as anything else, they report in the A.M.A. Journal, were matters of timing and questions of ethics...
...doctors knew well in advance that they wanted a human heart for a transplant. They figured that one could be taken from a relatively young patient dying of brain damage, and that it could be placed in a man dying of incurable heart-muscle failure. But how were they to find the proper brain patient dying just when the proper heart patient was waiting...
...doomed men was kept alive for a while by artificial breathing apparatus, and any one of them might have been a suitable donor if there had been an equally suitable recipient handy. But even if they had had a dying heart patient on whom to try a transplant, Dr. Hardy and his team felt that switching off the artificial respiration to let a man die before removing his heart seemed too much like killing a patient. Say Dr. Hardy and his colleagues: "We were not able to conclude that we would be willing to do this...
Even the selection of a patient to receive a heart transplant brought problems. The doctors planned to pick a man whose heart failure had progressed to the point where they considered it irreversible, so that nothing could save him but a new heart. But they had underestimated the amazing powers of recovery that even a damaged heart possesses. About the time they were ready to try a transplant, a man was admitted to their hospital, apparently dying after a heart attack. He astonished the doctors by getting well enough to go home. Clearly, it would have been wrong...
Lister's Dream. Protection against infection is especially important for burn patients because their wounds are large and the dead tissue is a rich soil for bacteria. It is no less important for transplant patients and for many others on high doses of cortisone-type drugs, whose resistance to infection is reduced...