• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Drone-Delivered Lung Proves Practicality Of Flying Donor Organs Without Crew

December 23, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

A modified drone carried a donor lung from Toronto Western Hospital to Toronto General Hospital in the space of five minutes, with the organ successfully transplanted into a patient with pulmonary fibrosis. Although donor organs have been transported between hospitals by drone before, lungs and hearts are considered particularly challenging. The operation demonstrates drones are a practical method for moving any organ that can be transplanted to the hospital with the most suitable recipient.

Hundreds of people worldwide are on waiting lists for donor organs, and many will die before they can receive what they need. A shortage of donors is only part of the problem – many organs go to waste because they can’t be delivered to a compatible recipient in time.

Advertisement

Traffic is one of the many obstacles to getting every healthy organ to a person who will benefit from it. Even with flashing lights and wailing sirens, ambulances can lose precious time getting between hospitals in a major city. This may soon be a thing of the past, however, after the description in Science Robotics of a life-saving drone flight performed last year.

The first reported drone transfer of a donor organ was a kidney, allowing a 44-year-old recipient to cease eight years of dialysis. Any organ has a better chance of successful implantation if it’s delivered quickly, but kidneys can last as long as 48 hours outside the body. Saving a few minutes in transit is helpful, but rarely essential. Delivery between cities is a bigger challenge, but still often possible.

However, hearts and lungs need to be transplanted within 4-6 hours of the donor’s death. Allowing for the time to perform the operation at each end, there is precious little left for delivery if the donor does not die in the same hospital as a priority recipient.

Advertisement

A team at the University Health Network, Toronto, had been planning to deliver a lung by remote control for years, installing a specially designed lung transport box in an M600 Pro Drone. They also removed the landing gear and normal payload rack to increase the weight available – lungs may not be heavy, but all the equipment required to keep them functioning is a different matter. Despite the addition of a parachute recovery system, cameras, lights, and GPS trackers, the entire system weighs less than 25 kilograms (55 pounds).

Over 400 test flights were undertaken between the roofs of the two hospitals, neither of which is designed to take crewed helicopters. Although the sudden availability of an organ is always the result of a tragedy, at least on this occasion conditions were excellent, with no rain, low wind, and good visibility.



The transplant went so smoothly that the 63-year-old patient was discharged from intensive care two days after surgery.

Advertisement

The two Toronto hospitals are just 1.5 kilometers (0.9 miles) apart, so even in bad traffic delivery would probably be quick. However, the success of this project demonstrates the capacity to undertake progressively longer transfers between more remote hospitals within cities, and eventually between widely separated cities. The authors express the hope that “Transcontinental delivery routes” can be established using boxes set up to carry every different type of organ.

Improved transport can never solve the organ shortage – only plans to grow organs from stem cells or genetically modify animals can do that. In the meantime, however, it can take the edge off the crisis.

The account of the transfer is described in Science Robotics.

Advertisement

[H/T Techexplore]

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. The Disrupt Desk will help you catch everything you missed at Disrupt 2021
  2. Do you need another app to discover beautiful places when you travel?
  3. Tesla hopes to build 5-10,000 vehicles a week at Berlin plant – Musk
  4. Electrical Stimulation To Brain Could Stop Fear Response In People With Phobias

Source Link: Drone-Delivered Lung Proves Practicality Of Flying Donor Organs Without Crew

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Want Your Career To Take The Next Step? How Scientific Conferences Can Be A Catalyst For Change
  • Why Do Little Birds Always Ride On Rhinos? It’s An Incredibly Deep Relationship
  • The World’s Rarest Great Ape Just Got Even Rarer
  • This Is The First Ever Map Of The Entire Sky In An Incredible 102 Infrared Colors
  • Was Jesus Christ Actually Born On December 25?
  • Is It True There Are Two Places On Earth Where You Can Walk Directly On The Mantle?
  • Around 90 Percent Of People Report Personality Changes After An Organ Transplant – Why?
  • This Worm Quietly Lived In A Lab For Decades, But They Had No Idea Just How Old It Truly Was
  • Fewer Than 50 Of These Carnivorous “Large Mouth” Plants Exist In The World – Will Humans Drive Them To Extinction?
  • These Are The Best Fictional Spaceships, According To Astronauts – What Are Yours?
  • Can I See Comet 3I/ATLAS From Earth During Its Closest Approach Today? Yes, Here’s How
  • The Earliest Winter Solstice Rituals Go All The Way Back To The Stone Age
  • We Were F*&@ing Right – Swearing Is Good For You And Now We Know Why
  • Why Do Wombats Have Square Poop? New Discovery Reveals How Their “Latrines” May Act Like Dating Apps
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Answering Some Of The Biggest Scientific Mysteries Of 2025
  • Astronomers Catch Incredible First Direct Images Of Objects Colliding In Another Star System
  • Billionaire Jared Isaacman Finally Confirmed As Head Of NASA, As Agency Faces Uncertain Future
  • Something Just Crashed Into The Moon – And Astronomers Captured The Whole Event
  • These “Living Rocks” Are Among The Oldest Surviving Life And Are Champion Carbon Dioxide Absorbers
  • Ambitious Iguana “Love Island” For Near-Extinct Reptiles Becomes Epic Conservation Success Story
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version