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Organ donation 2.0: recycling pacemakers

By | October 21, 2010, 5:15 AM PDT

You can’t take it with you. Well, you could, but someone somewhere needs that pacemaker that’s been keeping rhythm in your chest.

Let the beat go on, say 84 percent of pacemaker patients at the University of Michigan, where doctors are exploring the idea of implanting used pacemakers into needy heart patients across the world.

And why not? For most folks, there’s less sentimentality attached to an electric device than say, one’s heart.

The World Health Organization lists coronary disease as the leading cause of death, affecting both rich and poor corners of the Earth. But artificial pacemakers are harder to come by in low and middle income countries, with 1 to 2 million people dying each year due to an ability to get a one, according the researchers.

University of Michigan Health System:

Some foreign manufacturers have reduced the cost of pacemakers to as little as $800, a price that still makes it out of reach in poor nations.

“Despite the substantial cost reduction, a new pacemaker is often more than the annual income of the average worker in underdeveloped nations,” says [Director] Kim A. Eagle.

The cardiologists’ study, published in Circulation, addresses the legal and logistical issues of recycling pacemakers globally. Their project My Heart - Your Heart hopes to get FDA approval for clinical trials that will examine how to safely implant the hand-me-down heartpacers (with limited risk of infection). The devices will also need to work. The university will only accept pacemakers with a 70-percent battery life or higher.

After funeral homes mail the devices in, the researchers will sterilize them, as well as wipe clean any of their previous patients’ information.

Image: Wikipedia Commons

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Melissa Mahony

About Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2011.

Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Contributing Editor, Energy

Melissa Mahony has written for Scientific American Mind, Audubon Magazine, Plenty Magazine and LiveScience. Formerly, she was an editor at Wildlife Conservation magazine. She holds degrees from Boston College and New York University's Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program. She is based in New York.

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Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Melissa does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers. She currently works for the Wildlife Conservation Society as an editor. Should Melissa cover a topic in which the WCS is involved, she will disclose this fact in her writing.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Organ donation 2.0: recycling pacemakers
Well...if they can sterilize the device correctly and make sure that all old information has been removed from *ALL* databases, then why not?
Posted by tech_ed@...
21st Oct 2010
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RE: Organ donation 2.0: recycling pacemakers
Too bad there isn't a way to recharge the replaced depleted
pacers. Maybe something like the Duracell MyGrid system
could be developed that would recharge the depleted units
to a 70% charge. I have two sitting in a drawer and will soon
have a third.
Posted by cirripedia@...
21st Oct 2010
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RE: Organ donation 2.0: recycling pacemakers
What I don?t understand as an electronic eng is why pacemakers are not fitted with a simple rechargeable battery system like used in an electric toothbrush (with a bit more sophistication of course).Then all that would have to be done is place a induction coil over a tattoo mark on the skin which has another induction coil under the skin with a wire to the pacemaker a short distance away to prevent interference. this would charge the internal battery once a year by having the unit strapped on the skin either at home or in hospital. The pacemaker battery would have a capacity of at least two years+ . simple but effective.
On another point a friend of mine in his 70's who is a master watchmaker designed a mechanical battery charger similar to the self wind device in a watch. He did not full understand the electrical problems involved so I explained it to him & how to do it. A friend(ex now) of his saw the device & sold the idea to a large usa company which paid a lot of money for the idea without knowing he no right to sell it or actually getting the device as there is only one off which I believe in a bank safety deposit box. A uk euro member of parliament has his proof that the device was made by him ( I have seen papers and seen prototype device) & litigation is in progress not would you believe for the money, as my friend is a very wealthy man who among other things advises the Swiss government about fake watches. What he wants is it to be known that his name goes down in history as the designer of the device, and that it will help save lives.
Any serious big money medical companies( No third partys) can contact me & I will pass details to him, to send to his lawyers.
Posted by ronangel
23rd Oct 2010
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