Social Work
Organ Recovery Lied Transplant Center On-Campus Lodging Transplant Reunion Contact Us Today The Nebraska Medical Center Organ Transplant Program - Home Page
Liver
Kidney
Pancreas
Small Bowel
Heart
Blood and Marrow Stem Cell
 
Organ Recovery: Types of Donors  
The Shortage | The Process | Types of Donors | Bereavement Services | FAQs | Organ Donation Promotion  

Our Staff | Related Links | Donor & Recipient Correspondence | Be A Hero For Life | Interesting Facts

 


There are two types of donors, living and deceased.

Living Donor

Directed Donation
Organs are allocated by a national system overseen by the federal government and administered by the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS).

 
 
 
 
 

Get directions to The Nebraska Medical Center.

Take a tour of The Lied
Transplant Center building.

  Click here to view the Organ Transplant Glossary of Terms
 

Organs are allocated in a fair manner so as to not discriminate against anyone due to race, wealth or celebrity status. There is an occasional situation when donor families know another family member or friend that is awaiting organ transplantation. The family can elect to "direct the donation" to that individual. This "directed donation" is carried out if the organ is of compatible size and blood type and is also accepted by the transplant center where the patient is listed.

Deceased Donor

To qualify as a deceased donor, you must meet brain death criteria

What is brain death?

Brain death occurs when a person has an irreversible, catastrophic brain injury, which causes total cessation of all brain function (the upper brain structure and brain stem). Brain death is not a coma or persistent vegetative state. A physician not associated with the transplantation team determines brain death.

Brain death occurs when blood and the oxygen it carries cannot flow to the brain. Without blood and oxygen, the brain dies. When the brain dies, the person cannot move, breathe, think or feel. Pain and suffering ceases. The heart can continue to beat for awhile as the ventilator (breathing machine) provides artificial support and oxygen to the body. It may look like the person is sleeping because the ventilator fills the lungs with oxygen and helps keep the skin pink and warm. They are not sleeping. Brain death is death and cannot be reversed.

There are two ways of defining death. One is brain death, meaning the brain has stopped working and will never recover. This is different from coma, which is when someone is unconscious because of brain injury, but the brain still works and may heal eventually. The other definition of death is when the heart has stopped forever. This is called cardiopulmonary death.

How can brain death be determined?

Clinical Exam - First, the absence of function of all parts of the brain, as determined by clinical assessment (no movement, no response to stimulation, no breathing, no brain reflexes.)

Confirmatory Tests - Next, there is no electrical activity in the brain; this is determined by an EEG. Finally, there is no blood flow to the brain; this is determined by cerebral blood flow studies.

There are several ways in which a person can become brain dead, these include:

Anoxia - caused by drowning, respiratory diseases or drug overdose.

Ischemia - blockage of an artery leading to the brain or in the brain, heart attack (stoppage of the heart for a period of time), bleeding in the brain.

Intracranial hemmorrhage - caused by a head injury (a blow to the head) or a ruptured aneurysm. The ballooning of a blood vessel supplying the brain - can cut off blood supply or rupture.

A gunshot wound to the head - causes destruction of brain tissue and swelling of the brain.

Brain tumors - can destroy brain tissue and increase pressure within the brain, but do not go outside the central nervous system so organs are not affected.

When any of the above occur, they cause swelling of the brain. Because the brain is enclosed in the skull, it does not have room to swell, thus pressure within the skull increases (this is "intracranial pressure"). This can stop blood flow to the brain; killing brain cells and causing herniation of the brain (pushing the brain outside of its normal space). When brain cells die, they do not grow back, thus any damage caused is permanent and irreversible.

Some points to note:
* A person’s heart can still be beating because of the ventilator and medications helping to keep the blood pressure normal.
* A person who is declared brain dead by brain death criteria is legally dead.