Results 171 to 180 of about 17,838 (221)
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Renal Transplantation*

Journal of Small Animal Practice, 1967
SUMMARYKidney transplantation is no longer just an experimental procedure, nor is it yet by any means available to those who might require it. It does offer hope to those in chronic renal failure and we expect it to become more successful with increasing experience and donor selection.
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Renal Transplantation

AORN Journal, 1998
ABSTRACTMedical and scientific advances have improved the diagnosis and treatment of kidney disorders. Organ transplantation has evolved from an experimental surgery to a medically accepted form of treatment for organ failure. The kidney was the first organ to be successfully replaced by a donor organ, and it is presently the most commonly transplanted
openaire   +2 more sources

Renal transplantation in the diabetic

World Journal of Surgery, 1986
AbstractThe practices and recent results from a transplant center servicing a large proportion of uremic diabetics were reviewed to highlight modern management issues. The focus is taken off the diabetic as a “high‐risk” renal transplant recipient and brought to bear on the laborintensive aspects of his or her management.
R J, Rohrer   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Commerce in Renal Transplantation

Transplantation Proceedings, 1998
4th Congress of the Turkish-Transplantation-Society -- NOV 05-07, 1997 -- ANKARA ...
Akpolat, T, Ozturk, M
openaire   +2 more sources

Renal Transplantation in Children

Transplantation Proceedings, 2006
Various immunological, metabolic, and technical factors render pediatric recipients with end-stage renal disease unique from their adult counterparts. In addition, the potential for complications after renal transplantation is far greater in children than in adults. In this study, we retrospectively analyzed 83 pediatric recipients who underwent kidney
Baskin, E   +6 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Renal transplantation

Current Opinion in Urology, 1999
There has been an increase in the transplantation of kidneys from living, genetically unrelated donors and from extended criteria cadaver donors. The past policies about paid renal donors are being reconsidered. Techniques have been developed to reduce morbidity for the living renal donor.
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Cadaveric renal transplantation

Transplantation, 1967
Abstract 20 out of 24 patients who received a cadaveric renal transplant over the past two years have satisfactory function in the grafted kidney. None of the 20 living patients received more than one graft. Stable renal function has been maintained in 5 out of 7 patients who received a graft over a year ago, and in 11 out of 14 patients who received
P, Kincaid-Smith   +10 more
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Renal transplant evaluation

Seminars in Nuclear Medicine, 1982
Radionuclide scintigraphy of the renal transplant has assumed an important role in disclosing the complications that beset this life-prolonging procedure. Renal ischemia, whether caused by mechanical obstruction of the blood vessels or ureter or immunological rejection, can be detected by qualitative and quantitative perfusion studies using 99mTc ...
P T, Kirchner, L, Rosenthall
openaire   +2 more sources

Renal Transplants and Renal Tumors

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1969
Elsewhere in this issue Jochimsen et al (p 1721) report the effective treatment of advanced renal failure in a patient with tuberculous sclerosis, a disease associated with multiple hamortomas. In their patient the diseased kidneys also contained bilateral clear cell tumors which were indistinguishable from renal cell adenocarcinoma.
openaire   +2 more sources

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