Can a healthy person donate all the organs of his body? Thank you for your questions.

Registration of the local red cross. City, county (city, district) Red Cross Society shall submit the registration information to the Provincial Red Cross Society within three days. The local Red Cross may entrust a medical institution to register, and the medical institution shall submit the registration information to the entrusted Red Cross within three days. A natural person who has reached the age of 18 and has full capacity for civil conduct may donate living organs, and a written consent certificate shall be provided before donation. Donors who donate living organs should not endanger their lives. If a natural person is willing to donate organs after death, there shall be a written certificate of consent to donate; Only by verbally agreeing to donate can the following conditions be met: (1) written certificates from his spouse and two doctors; (2) if there is no spouse, there is a written certificate from his parents or adult children and two doctors; (three) no spouse, parents, adult children, there are two other close relatives and two doctors written proof; (4) if there are no close relatives, there are written certificates from the neighborhood committees, pension institutions and other organizations of their work units or places of residence and two doctors. Organ donation Organ donation means that when a person is diagnosed with brain death and can only rely on ventilators and drugs to maintain vital signs, his organs are donated to dying patients waiting for transplantation based on his wishes before his death or the consent of his family members, so that his life can be extended. Healthy adults can also donate one of their kidneys or part of their liver to relatives or spouses. Organ donation includes cell donation, tissue donation and organ donation. Cell donation refers to extracting viable cell groups from a healthy person and importing them into another patient who needs help. The most typical clinical practice is to donate bone marrow to help patients who need bone marrow transplantation. Tissue donation refers to donating some tissues of the human body to those patients who need help. These tissues include: skin, cornea, bones, tendons, blood vessels, nerves and so on. A donor can donate multiple tissues to patients waiting for transplantation at the same time according to his own wishes. Organ donation is to donate a living organ to another patient who needs transplant treatment. These patients are usually very serious and cannot be cured by other treatments. At present, many kinds of heart, kidney, liver, pancreas, lung, small intestine and abdomen have been successfully transplanted in the world. Types of organ donation Living donors Healthy adults can donate one of their kidneys or part of their livers to relatives or spouses within three generations. Living donors must first be absolutely voluntary, and they must pass the examination of the hospital and the justice of the public security department before they can donate. Organ donation comes from a person who just died. He/she expressed his/her willingness to donate organs after his/her death to help those dying patients who need transplantation. Brain Death and Organ Donation The traditional criteria for judging death are that the heart stops beating permanently, breathing stops and the pupil's reflection on light disappears. After the heartbeat and breathing stop, tissues and organs in other parts of the body will lose their functions due to lack of oxygen and nutrition. Brain death The brain tissue of human body consists of three parts: brain, cerebellum and brain stem. Brainstem is the life center of human body, which controls important functions such as respiration, heartbeat and blood pressure. Cells in some parts of the human body can recover their functions through regeneration after injury, but brain cells are different: once they are necrotic, they cannot regenerate. Therefore, when a person's brain stem is irreparably damaged, the brain stem will permanently lose its function completely, thus stopping breathing and heartbeat. Subsequently, other organs and tissues of the body will gradually lose their functions because there is no breathing and heartbeat. Clinical brain death refers to brain stem death. In recent ten years, due to the progress of medical technology, when a person dies, doctors can use ventilators and drugs to maintain his physiological functions such as breathing, heartbeat and blood pressure for two weeks. But once these auxiliary facilities are removed, he/she can't breathe spontaneously and his/her heart will stop beating. In this case, if there are no other special diseases, organs and tissues in other parts of the body are still healthy except the death of brain cells. Whether a vegetative person can donate organs is because brain diseases or other systemic diseases lead to the loss of brain function, but brain stem function still exists. Therefore, vegetative people have no ability of thinking, memory, cognition, behavior and language, but they have breathing, heartbeat and facial movements. So vegetative people are not brain dead, so they can't donate organs. Besides mother, you can also give life. Organ transplantation What is organ transplantation? Organ transplantation is to put a healthy organ on a dying patient with a serious disease through surgery or other methods, so that the organ can continue to function, thus giving the recipient a new life.