
Australian surgeons said on Friday that they have made a major breakthrough by making a dead heart beat again and successfully use it in a transplant.
Previously, surgeons relied on donor hearts from brain-dead patients whose hearts were still beating.
But director of Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital Heart Lung Transplant Unit, Prof. Peter MacDonald, told a press conference that the successful surgery meant many more "dead" hearts could be used in transplants.
"In all our years, our biggest hindrance has been the limited availability of organ donors," MacDonald told reporters.
MacDonald said the hospital had recently successfully transplanted two hearts, which were donated after the hosts had died and the heart was no longer beating.
The first transplant patient was Michelle Gribilar, 57, who was suffering from congenital heart failure and had surgery about two months ago.
Gribilar said before surgery, she had struggled to walk 100m but now she can walk 3 km every day.
"I was very sick before I had it," she said. "Now I'm a different person altogether."
The transplant breakthrough involves a special preservation solution which works in conjunction with a machine that houses the heart, known as the ex vivo organ care system (OCS).
The OCS restores the heart beat of the donor heart and keeps it warm until it is ready to go into a recipient.
MacDonald said the move to recover hearts which were previously considered unsuitable for transplantation means that thousands more hearts could become available for transplants.
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