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Kidney Transplant Program Living Organ Donations
Who Can be a Living Donor?
Making the Decision to Donate a Kidney A number of resources are also available to provide education and support to possible donors. These are listed in the Education and Support section of this site. Donation Process The prospective donor will also be counseled regarding long-term health considerations, financial and insurance matters and other issues that could affect an individual’s decision to serve as a kidney donor. All information shared during this process will be kept strictly confidential between the patient and the Transplant Team. Information will not be shared with the recipient or the recipient’s physician unless authorized by the donor. At any time in the process, the donor can make the decision not to go forward with the donation. Testing Procedures A complete physical exam will be done, including an EKG to assess heart function, and a chest x-ray to check the lungs for possible abnormalities. X-rays will also be taken to identify the structure of the kidney, veins, arteries, ureter and other parts of the anatomy. Female donors may be asked to undergo a gynecological exam and mammography. Kidney function tests will be performed to evaluate the condition of your kidneys. Additionally, your medical history will be reviewed for possible past illnesses or surgeries that could affect your ability to donate. A psychological evaluation will also be required. Health Risks & Other Considerations Urology professionals have long known that diseased kidneys can be removed from healthy individuals with no long-term consequences to those individuals. In the United States, surgeons began performing living donor kidney transplantation in 1954. Over the past nearly 50 years, the transplant community has had ample opportunity to observe individuals who have given up a kidney to a loved one. Individual patients have been followed for more than 20 years after donation, again, proving no serious long-term consequences. While there are some potential risks, it is believed that kidney donation is not only safe, but is the preferred choice of kidney transplantation for potential kidney transplant recipients. This is obvious in the fact that all kidney transplant centers in the United States feel living donor kidney transplantation is ethically and morally justified. In 2002, more than 40 percent of kidney transplants done in the United States were from living donors. Medical Considerations
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