Blood Transfusion Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Blood Transfusion, including details on blood donation, blood types, leukemia. | ||||||||
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To do or not to do living donor hepatectomy in Jehovah's Witnesses: single institution experience of the first 13 resections.Jabbour N, Gagandeep S, Bramstedt KA, Brenner M, Mateo R, Selby R, Genyk Y The Division of Hepatobiliary/Pancreatic Surgery and Transplant Surgery, University of Southern California, University Hospital, Los Angeles, California, USA. njabbour@surgery.usc.edu Living donor liver transplantation has come to be an acceptable alternative to deceased donor transplants. Several ethical issues related to living donation have been raised in the face of reported perioperative morbidity and mortality. We report our experience in 13 consecutive Jehovah's Witness (JW) donor hepatectomies. From June 1999 to April 2004, 13 adult JW donors underwent donor hepatectomies at the USC-University Hospital. Nine donors underwent right lobectomy with a 62% mean volume of the liver resected. Four donors underwent a left lateral segmentectomy with a mean volume of 17.8%. Cell scavenging techniques, acute normovolemic hemodilution and fractionated products were used. The mean hospital stay was 6.2 days. All donors are alive and well at a median follow-up time of 3 years and 4 months. Live liver donation can be done safely in JW population if performed within a comprehensive bloodless surgery program. Published 8 April 2005 in Am J Transplant, 5(5): 1141-5.
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