A World Premiere: For the First Time, a Human Liver Was Treated in a Machine and Then Successfully Transplanted

The Wyss Zurich Team connects the donor liver to the perfusion machine in the cl
The Wyss Zurich Team connects the donor liver to the perfusion machine in the clean room. (Image: USZ)
The Wyss Zurich Team connects the donor liver to the perfusion machine in the clean room. (Image: USZ) The multidisciplinary Zurich research team Liver4Life has succeeded in doing something during a treatment attempt that had never been achieved in the history of medicine until now: it treated an originally damaged human liver in a machine for three days outside of a body and then implanted the recovered organ into a cancer patient. One year later, the patient is doing well. The Liver4Life research team owes its perfusion machine, which was developed in house, to the fact that it became possible to implant a human organ into a patient after a storage period of three days outside a body. The machine mimics the human body as accurately as possible, in order to provide ideal conditions for the human livers. A pump serves as a replacement heart, an oxygenator replaces the lungs and a dialysis unit performs the functions of the kidneys. In addition, numerous hormone and nutrient infusions perform the functions of the intestine and pancreas.
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