Today’s Solutions: March 23, 2026

After organs are harvested following a donor’s death, there’s a very short window of time in which the transplant can be made. Livers, for example, can only be kept outside of the body for nine hours before irreparable damage is done, and the organ must be discarded. This is because freezing leads to deep frostbite setting in, harming the tissue and making the organ unviable. 

In groundbreaking research, the length of time that harvested organs can now be stored has tripled to 27 hours through the use of a ‘super-cooling’ technique, which lowers the organ’s temperature –4° C without forming damaging ice crystals. The method works by pumping a preservative cocktail of anti-freeze and glucose into the livers before cooling them to below freezing temperatures, so they can be transported in a state of suspended animation. Once at the transplant center they are then carefully warmed to bring them out of their torpor. 

With a shortage of organs available for transplant, this is a remarkable achievement in the medical world that could save tens of thousands of lives each year.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

More movement, more energy burned: new study challenges metabolism myth

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM The idea that your body works against you when you exercise has circulated in fitness and science communities ...

Read More

Navigating digital dating and modern relationships

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Digital dating has changed the way we connect, creating a new vocabulary of phrases such as ghosting, orbiting, ...

Read More

Eco-anxiety and grief part I: the differences

Environmentalists have warned about climate change's effects for decades, and in light of the COP27 conference in Egypt, climate change is certainly on many ...

Read More

A glimpse into the feline world: how your cat experiences life through the se...

While cats have the same fundamental senses as humans, how they interpret and use sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch creates a unique tapestry ...

Read More