News2 mins ago
Unexpected Effect Of Transplantation?
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -englan d-essex -207624 37
I know there is a shortage of organs for transplant but should they really be re using the lungs of a smoker?
I know there is a shortage of organs for transplant but should they really be re using the lungs of a smoker?
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No best answer has yet been selected by ZedBloke. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Tricky one - in this case the lungs appeared healthy at the point at which they were used.
The young woman concerned should have been given the option not to take those lungs - but my guess is that (without the benefit of 20/20 foresight) she would have been so desperate for a transplant that she would have taken the risk.
In her circumstances I certainly would.
The young woman concerned should have been given the option not to take those lungs - but my guess is that (without the benefit of 20/20 foresight) she would have been so desperate for a transplant that she would have taken the risk.
In her circumstances I certainly would.
Seems odd on the surface, but this paragraph from the article sums it up really.
"The Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust said: "It is very rare for patients to specify that they do not wish to be considered for clinically healthy lungs from smokers.
"This is because the risks are much higher if patients decline donor lungs from a former smoker, and decide to wait for another set of organs which are both a match for them and from a non-smoker, to become available.
"However, we recognise that Jennifer should have been given the opportunity to make this choice."
If the donor organs are determined to be clinically sound, then the risk of waiting for another compatible donor outweigh the theoretical risk of developing cancer, it seems to me...
"The Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust said: "It is very rare for patients to specify that they do not wish to be considered for clinically healthy lungs from smokers.
"This is because the risks are much higher if patients decline donor lungs from a former smoker, and decide to wait for another set of organs which are both a match for them and from a non-smoker, to become available.
"However, we recognise that Jennifer should have been given the opportunity to make this choice."
If the donor organs are determined to be clinically sound, then the risk of waiting for another compatible donor outweigh the theoretical risk of developing cancer, it seems to me...
being a smoker doesnt always mean cancer though.
presumably many have had this happen to them and have gone on to live long and healthy lives.
the organs should certainly undergo deeper tests for disease, but i guess if its a toss up between risking a smokers lung or certain death then it has to be the lung id say.
very sad for her though.
presumably many have had this happen to them and have gone on to live long and healthy lives.
the organs should certainly undergo deeper tests for disease, but i guess if its a toss up between risking a smokers lung or certain death then it has to be the lung id say.
very sad for her though.
This is from the UK ONS, Em, for 2011.
"Figures released today show that mortality rates last year were the lowest ever recorded for England and Wales, at 6,236 deaths per million population for males and 4,458 deaths per million population for females.
Cancer accounted for 30% of them, with circulatory diseases, such as heart disease and strokes, the cause of 29%.
But cancer death rates have fallen by 14% for men and 10% for women in the previous decade.
And between 2001 and 2011, the death rates for circulatory diseases fell by 44% to 1,803 deaths per million population for males and 1,110 deaths per million population for females"
So death from all types of cancer is a close candidate for highest contributor to the mortality rate, hotly contested by cardiovascular problems.
Lung cancer would not be the highest single contributor to mortality, although it might the single largest contributor to death by cancer - an important distinction given the topic of conversation.
Smoking, of course, contributes a lot to the overall mortality rate, impacting as it does on cardiovascular, respiratory and cancer related deaths....
As far as this particular case goes - it would be preferable if prospective donors were non alcoholic non- smokers - but we do not, at this moment in time, have that luxury. There are far more recipients, some in a desperate state of health, than there are donors.
"Figures released today show that mortality rates last year were the lowest ever recorded for England and Wales, at 6,236 deaths per million population for males and 4,458 deaths per million population for females.
Cancer accounted for 30% of them, with circulatory diseases, such as heart disease and strokes, the cause of 29%.
But cancer death rates have fallen by 14% for men and 10% for women in the previous decade.
And between 2001 and 2011, the death rates for circulatory diseases fell by 44% to 1,803 deaths per million population for males and 1,110 deaths per million population for females"
So death from all types of cancer is a close candidate for highest contributor to the mortality rate, hotly contested by cardiovascular problems.
Lung cancer would not be the highest single contributor to mortality, although it might the single largest contributor to death by cancer - an important distinction given the topic of conversation.
Smoking, of course, contributes a lot to the overall mortality rate, impacting as it does on cardiovascular, respiratory and cancer related deaths....
As far as this particular case goes - it would be preferable if prospective donors were non alcoholic non- smokers - but we do not, at this moment in time, have that luxury. There are far more recipients, some in a desperate state of health, than there are donors.
this wasn't the link i was looking at, can't find it now.
http:// www.hea lthdail y.co.uk /health -matter s/2012/ 11/08/c ancer-l eading- cause-o f-death -in-the -uk
http://
Lung cancer would not be the highest single contributor to mortality, although it might the single largest contributor to death by cancer
yes. it is what i didn't add, that the medical expert said that out of the many cancers, lung cancer is the one with the highest mortality rate.
There was quite a lot more, but as i said it's now a moot point.
yes. it is what i didn't add, that the medical expert said that out of the many cancers, lung cancer is the one with the highest mortality rate.
There was quite a lot more, but as i said it's now a moot point.
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