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Current issues in living donor nephrectomy.
- Source :
-
Clinical transplantation [Clin Transplant] 1997 Oct; Vol. 11 (5 Pt 2), pp. 505-10. - Publication Year :
- 1997
-
Abstract
- Of 96 consecutive renal transplants in 2 years, 50 (52%) were living donor grafts. Donor demographics, treatment plans, length of stay (LOS), charges, and complications were reviewed. Donors included 27 women and 23 men aged 22 to 61 (mean 42.2) years; 33 were living related and 17 living unrelated donors. Racial distribution included 1 Hispanic, 2 Asian, 8 black, and 39 white donors. Pretransplant evaluation defined renal anatomy and function (minimal creatinine clearance 75 cc/min). Hospital admission occurred the morning of donation. Nephrectomy under general anesthesia entailed an anterior flank, extra-retroperitoneal approach (no rib resection); and postoperative epidural pain control was standard. Progressive early ambulation and pulmonary self-care optimized recovery. The 50 donors were hospitalized for 2 (n = 7), 3 (n = 18), 4 (n = 15), 5 (n = 6), and 6-8 (n = 4) days (mean LOS: 3.74 +/- 0.17, range 2-8 days). The mean charge for donor hospitalization was $15,415 +/- $397 (range $10,808-$29,579). One major intraoperative hemorrhage required transfusion; 1 patient was readmitted for wound drainage and pneumonia treated medically. While 40 of 50 patients (80%) were hospitalized for 4 days or less, there was no readmission because of short hospital stay. One early graft loss (3 days) occurred from technical problems; all others gained excellent life sustaining function. Three additional kidneys failed from rejection, noncompliance, and systemic coagulopathy. One recipient died at 8 months (CVA) with normal renal function. Current strategies for successful living kidney donation are thorough patient and family education, ambulatory preoperative testing, morning of surgery admission, and discharge planning beginning before hospitalization. Excellent outcomes may be accompanied by a brief LOS, epidural pain management, and liberal use of willing and healthy related and unrelated living donors.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Analgesia, Epidural
Anesthesia, General
Asian People
Black People
Blood Loss, Surgical
Creatinine urine
Drainage
Early Ambulation
Female
Graft Survival
Hospital Charges
Hospitalization economics
Humans
Intraoperative Complications
Kidney anatomy & histology
Kidney physiology
Length of Stay
Lung physiology
Male
Middle Aged
Pain, Postoperative prevention & control
Patient Admission
Patient Care Planning
Patient Readmission
Pneumonia drug therapy
Postoperative Complications
Self Care
Surgical Wound Infection surgery
Treatment Outcome
White People
Kidney Transplantation
Living Donors
Nephrectomy adverse effects
Nephrectomy economics
Nephrectomy methods
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0902-0063
- Volume :
- 11
- Issue :
- 5 Pt 2
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Clinical transplantation
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 9361951