Emerging role of carbon monoxide in intestinal transplantation
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Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
Abstract
Intestinal transplantation has become an established therapeutic option that provides improved quality of life to
patients with end-stage intestinal failure when total parenteral nutrition fails. Whereas this challenging lifesaving
intervention has shown exceptional growth over the past decade, illustrating the evolution of this complex
and technical procedure from its preclinical origin in the mid-20th century to become a routine clinical
practice today with several recent innovations, its success is hampered by multiple hurdles including technical
challenges such as surgical manipulation during intestinal graft procurement, graft preservation and reperfusion
damage, resulting in poor graft quality, graft rejection, post-operative infectious complications, and ultimately
negatively impacting long-term recipient survival. Therefore, strategies to improve current intestinal transplantation
protocol may have a significant impact on post-transplant outcomes. Carbon monoxide (CO), previously
considered solely as a toxic gas, has recently been shown to be a physiological signaling molecule at low
physiological concentrations with therapeutic potentials that could overcome some of the challenges in intestinal
transplantation. This review discusses recent knowledge about CO in intestinal transplantation, the underlying
molecular mechanisms of protection during intestinal graft procurement, preservation, transplantation and posttransplant
periods. A section of the review also discusses clinical translation of CO and its challenges in the field
of solid organ transplantation.
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Research Article