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Pancreas Transplantation

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1984
Clinical pancreas transplantation is a procedure being applied with increasing effectiveness for the treatment of diabetes. The authors examine, through the Pancreas Transplant Registry, all known cases of islet transplantation since 1970 and all pancreas transplantation since 1977 and then summarize their own work on pancreas transplants at the ...
D E, Sutherland   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Pancreas transplantation

Current Opinion in Immunology, 1987
The number of pancreas transplants being performed and the success rate have continued to increase. Most pancreas transplants have been placed in diabetic recipients of kidney transplants, but application to nonuremic, non-kidney transplant recipients without end-stage disease is increasing.
openaire   +3 more sources

Pancreas Transplantation

Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, 1999
Although intensified insulin therapy regimens enable normalization of blood glucose levels and related metabolic parameters, these regimens are associated with an increased incidence of hypoglycemic episodes. Pancreas transplantation has achieved the goal of providing insulin independence with stable and continuous normoglycemia.
Z, Shapira, A, Yussim, E, Mor
openaire   +2 more sources

Pancreas and islet transplantation

The Japanese Journal of Surgery, 1977
AbstractConsiderable evidence supports the hypothesis that the microangiopathic lesions of diabetes are secondary to disordered metabolism. This hypothesis underlies the rationale for whole pancreas and islet transplantation. Whole pancreas transplantation has had limited clinical success—only 1 of 47 recipients reported to the ACS/NIH Transplant ...
David E.R. Sutherland   +2 more
openaire   +5 more sources

Pancreas transplant alone

Transplantation Proceedings, 2004
Pancreas transplant alone (PTA) represents a growing proportion of overall pancreas transplantations, with 1-year patient and graft survivals of almost 100% and higher than 80%, respectively. PTA can restore normoglycemia without exogenous insulin administration and eliminate acute diabetic complications.
MARCHETTI, PIERO   +7 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Pancreas Transplantation

Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, 2012
SPK transplant is the definitive treatment of type 1 diabetes combined with end-stage renal disease. Long-term graft function can lead to improvement in diabetes-related complications and, in patients younger than 50 years, can lead to improved overall survival. PAK transplant and PA transplant do not result in similar improvements in patient survival,
openaire   +2 more sources

Robotic Pancreas Transplantation

Gastroenterology Clinics of North America, 2018
Obesity is considered a relative contraindication to pancreas transplantation due to an overall increased risk in wound-related complications and surgical site infections. The rationale for performing pancreas transplantation in a minimally invasive fashion is to reduce these risks, which can be associated with inferior patient and graft survival ...
Spaggiari M.   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Pancreas and pancreas-kidney transplantation

Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension, 1998
Pancreas transplantation consistently results in an insulin-independent normoglycemic state in insulin-dependent diabetic recipients. Registry data show insulin independence is achieved in 80% of simultaneous kidney and pancreas recipients, more than 70% of pancreas after kidney recipients, and more than 60% of nonuremic pancreas transplant alone ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Challenges in pancreas transplantation

Acta Diabetologica, 2016
Whole-organ pancreas transplantation, either alone or combined with a kidney transplant, is the only definitive treatment for many patients with type 1 diabetes that restores normal glucose homoeostasis and insulin independence. Pancreas transplantation delays, or potentially prevents, secondary diabetes complications and is associated with improvement
Sharples, E, Mittal, S, Friend, P
openaire   +4 more sources

Pancreas Transplantation and Dysuria

Journal of Urology, 1994
Bladder drainage of the pancreatic graft remains the most common technique in pancreatic transplantation. Graft and patient survival is superior to duct injection and bowel drainage techniques. However, several urological complications develop as a result of bladder drainage.
Ronald M. Ferguson   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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