Autor: |
Mohan, Nithyakalyani, Raghavan, Srividhya, Sunder, Anusha, Vaidya, Anil, Chandrasekaran, Nivash, Muthuraman, Senthil, Babu, Dinesh, Mathivanan, Karthik, Krishnan, Elan, Appakalai, Balamurugan |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Life Research Journal; 2022, Vol. 5 Issue 4, p1-7, 7p |
Abstrakt: |
Background: Diabetes is a widespread disease with increasing prevalence. Transplantation of islets of Langerhans is a viable treatment for a selected group of patients with repeated hypoglycemic episodes in type 1 diabetes. The countries where islet transplantation has not been explored suffer from insufficient knowledge concerning key elements of the isolation process. Donor and organ procurement parameters impact human islet yield, although for research purposes, islet yield may be secondary in importance to islet function. This paper will analyze the feasibility of research--only human islet isolation and signify parameters underlying a successful yield in the Indian population. This eventually can make islet transplantation a clinical reality in India. Method: After receiving the consent for procuring brain-dead pancreas from the first-degree of relatives, samples were collected and transported in a transportation buffer at 4 °C. The procedure consists of a mechanically enhanced enzymatic digestion of the pancreas, after which it was taken for purification using Ficoll method, followed by islet quality testing. Results: Through 15 isolations done over a span of approximately 2 years during the COVID pandemic in India,we confirm that ischemic time and glycated hemoglobin, each have a negative impact on isolation purity and yield. Notably, extending cold ischemic tim beyond the typical clinical isolation cutoff of 12 hours (to ≥ 18 h) had a huge impact on islet function and yield. Age had a negative correlation with islet yield; however other biological parameters (specifically body mass index) and isolation variables appear to make a significant contribution to the heterogeneity of human islet yield. Our current work demonstrates the feasibility of extending acceptable cold ischemic time for research-focused human islet isolation and highlights the biological variation in isolation of human islets from donors with and without diabetes. Conclusion: India requires establishment of an islet transplant program using the current standard methods of"islet isolation" and donor program and process. Research should focus on improving standards in the islet preparation process to increase the number of successful preparations, shorten the isolation time, and increase patient safety so that the theoretical risk involved can become a practical reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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