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Tissue Bank |
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How
to register as a tissue donor Raising awareness of all those affected by MS Requesting
tissue for research on multiple sclerosis Promoting the Tissue Bank in the research community The Bank
Statement Articles
Links: Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland International Federation of Multiple Sclerosis
Societies E-mail: ukmstissuebank@imperial.ac.uk
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Banking on the
future .
As tissue obtained shortly
after death is the most valuable to scientists, it is vital that donors
discuss their wishes with those close to them: their next-of-kin or legal
representative, GP or any other relevant person. The more people who know of
a person's wish to donate tissue, the more chance there is that no one will
forget about it at the critical moment. When someone dies, their body becomes
the property of their next-of-kin, so it is important that they understand
and endorse a pledge to the tissue bank. What
happens after death? At, or near the time of death,
a person's next-of-kin, legal representative or GP should contact the tissue
bank by ringing a 24-hour telephone number. One of the tissue bank team will
be available at all times and will ring back and ask for details. That person
will then arrange for the funeral director to take the body to a hospital
near the home or place of death to remove the brain, spinal cord, and any
other tissue being donated.
If someone has a fatal
accident, emergency personnel need to know immediately of their wish to
donate tissue for research into MS. It is therefore important that people
carry their donor card at all times so that the tissue bank can be told. What
happens to donated tissue? Tissue, once removed, will be
taken to It is also essential that the
tissue bank received donations of tissue from people who do not have MS.
Interpretation of research results using MS tissue can only be made by
comparison with tissue from people without MS. Sometimes it is important to
have control tissue matched for age and sex, and sometimes it is useful to
compare MS tissue with that from people with other neurological conditions.
So this is something that everyone can be involved in, whether they have MS
or not. page 4 page 1 - introduction |
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The UK Multiple Sclerosis Tissue Bank Tel: 020
7594 9734 E-mail: ukmstissuebank@imperial.ac.uk |
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The UK Multiple
Sclerosis Tissue Bank is funded by the Multiple Sclerosis Society of |
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