Protecting transplanted lungs

Primary graft dysfunction (PGD) — acute lung injury that develops within 72 hours of lung transplantation — is a major cause of illness and death after transplant. The mechanisms leading to PGD are not well understood, and there are no specific therapeutic interventions.

Ciara Shaver, MD, PhD, Lorraine Ware, MD, and colleagues, explored the role of cell-free hemoglobin (normally located inside red blood cells) in PGD.

The investigators found that elevated preoperative cell-free hemoglobin was associated with increased risk of PGD in lung transplant patients. In isolated human lungs and cultures of pulmonary endothelial cells (the cells that line blood vessels), they showed that cell-free hemoglobin increased vascular permeability, or “leakiness.”

Read the rest of the article about PGD here.