A British team of doctors, engineers and surgeons announcing the achievement on Friday said it could be common practice in hospitals across the developed world within a few years, up to doubling the number of livers available for transplant.
So far the procedure has been performed on two patients on Britain`s liver transplant waiting list and both are making excellent recoveries, the medical team said.
"It was astounding to see an initially cold, grey liver flushing with colour once hooked up to our machine and performing as it would within the body," Constantin Coussios, a professor of biomedical engineering at Oxford University and one of the machine`s co-inventors said.
"What was even more amazing was to see the same liver transplanted into a patient who is now walking around," he said.
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