FYI: Are Organs Ever Re-Donated?

Monday, August 16, 2010 - 09:35 in Health & Medicine

A few transplants out of the 28,000 performed every year involve the same organ spending time in more than two bodies. The most common scenario arises when a patient in the late stages of a disease receives a new liver or kidney as a last-ditch effort to keep him alive. If he dies shortly after, and the new organ wasn't the cause, re-transplanting may be an option. There are a few good reasons, however, why donated organs aren't often re-gifted. If the organ is coming from someone who was so sick that he needed a new organ, it probably lived a pretty rough second life. What's more, dying involves the entire body shutting down. "The trauma of dying can injure an organ," says Robert Montgomery, the director of the Comprehensive Transplant Center at Johns Hopkins University. "And then the second person dies, and the organ is taken out again. That's more...

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