Viaspan was the trademark under which the University of Wisconsin cold storage solution (also known as University of Wisconsin solution or UW solution) was sold. Currently, UW solution is sold under the Belzer UW trademark and others. UW solution was the first solution designed for use in organ transplantation, and became the first intracellular-like preservation medium. Developed in the late 1980s by Folkert Belzer and James Southard for pancreas preservation, the solution soon displaced EuroCollins solution as the preferred medium for cold storage of livers and kidneys, as well as pancreas. The solution has also been used for hearts and other organs. University of Wisconsin cold storage solution remains what is often called the gold standard for organ preservation, despite the development of other solutions that are in some respects superior.
The guiding principles for the development of UW Solution were:
- osmotic concentration maintained by the use of metabolically inert substances like lactobionate and raffinose rather than with glucose
- Hydroxyethyl starch (HES) is used to prevent edema
- Substances are added to scavenge free radicals, along with steroids and insulin.
Video Viaspan
Composition
- Potassium lactobionate: 100 mM
- KH2PO4: 25 mM
- MgSO4: 5 mM
- Raffinose: 30 mM
- Adenosine: 5 mM
- Glutathione: 3 mM
- Allopurinol: 1 mM
- Hydroxyethyl starch: 50 g/L
Maps Viaspan
See also
- Biostasis
- Organ transplant
- Belzer UW
References
External links
- SPS-1 (UW Solution), Static Preservation Solution)
- Belzer UW Cold Storage Solution - Composition While it has the same formula as ViaSpan, Belzer UW Cold Storage Solution does not require refrigerated storage or filtering before use, as specified in ViaSpan's direction for use.
- Belzer UW Cold Storage Solution - Enables storage at room temperature.
- Viaspan RxMed
- CoStorSol (University of Wisconsin) Cold Storage Solution
Source of article : Wikipedia