Brain Death Sans Frontières

Abstract
To the Editor: Clinical criteria make it possible to be brain dead in one country and not in another. This has implications for international organ-retrieval programs.A 2530-g male infant was delivered at 37 weeks' gestation by emergency cesarean section because of profound fetal bradycardia. There was asystole at birth. A satisfactory cardiac output was established within five minutes. At 41 hours the infant's condition fulfilled the Canadian criteria for brain death,1 with no response to stimuli and absence of all brain-stem reflexes — pupillary light, corneal, oculocephalic, vestibulo-ocular, and pharyngeal. An electrocardiogram was isoelectric, and brain-stem auditory evoked potentials . . .