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Freiburg surgeons develop new treatment method to improve survival after cardiac arrest

Freiburg surgeons develop new treatment method to improve survival after cardiac arrest Around 50,000 people suffer sudden cardiac arrest in Germany every year. When occurring outside a hospital, the chances of survival are only ten percent. Survivors often suffer from severe permanent neurological damage. On July 21st, 2021, researchers from the Faculty of Medicine - University of Freiburg, Germany, published together with German and US colleagues a review article in the journal Nature Reviews Neuroscience. They describe the most important therapeutic factors for successful resuscitation. The scientists name the therapy concept based on these factors CARL (Controlled Automated Reperfusion of the whole body). In recent years, the Freiburg physicians and perfusionists have already developed a special and mobile heart-lung machine for resuscitation that allows CARL therapy for the first time. One of the first persons treated with CARL therapy successfully survived a cardiac arrest

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United-states
German
Christoph-benk
Friedhelm-beyersdorf
Emily-henderson
Yale-university
Department-of-cardiovascular-surgery-at-medical-center
Max-planck-institute-for-metabolic-research
Department-of-cardiovascular-surgery
University-of-freiburg
Nature-reviews

Survival after cardiac arrest - Freiburg cardiovascular surgeons develop new technique

Survival after cardiac arrest - Freiburg cardiovascular surgeons develop new technique
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Georg-trummer
Christoph-benk
Friedhelm-beyersdorf
Yale-university
Department-of-cardiovascular-surgery-at-medical-center
Max-planck-institute-for-metabolic-research
University-hospital-freiburg
University-of-freiburg
European-commission-horizon

Freiburger Forscher wollen Risiken großer Herz-OPs senken - Freiburg

Ein bisschen sieht die kleine Pumpe samt YCOR-Adapter aus wie ein Spielzeug. Tatsächlich ist es alles andere als das. Das Gerät, das Herzchirurg Wolfgang Bothe auf der Handfläche hält, ist eine Art Kunstherz, der spitz zulaufende Aufsatz ist das, was er erdacht hat und wofür sein interdisziplinäres Team in den kommenden drei Jahren eine Validierungsförderung vom Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) verliehen bekommen hat. 1,6 Millionen Euro, damit – so die Erwartung – eine Erfindung zur Serienreife gedeiht, die etlichen Herzpatienten zugutekommt: Dieser Adapter wird dann die große Herzoperation deutlich erleichtern, mit der Herzunterstützungssysteme eingesetzt werden.

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