Because of the limited chance of receiving a kidney transplant (for several well-known reasons), a lot of desperate dialysis patients procure an unrelated donor kidney transplant against all medical advice. This type of renal paid transplantation is associated with many surgical complications and invasive opportunistic infections that increase the morbidity and mortality in this group of transplant recipients. In this report, we describe a case of a 22-year-old girl with a segmental infarction of the graft lower pole and a complete pyelo-ureteral necrosis as a consequence of some vascular damage, complicated by a pathohistological finding of an invasive candidiasis. Despite the successful surgical pyelovesical anastomosis and the good recovery of the patient and the kidney, long-term prognosis remains poor. The lack of information from the transplanting center regarding both donor and recipient and the associated, unacceptable risks on the graft and patient survival in unrelated, paid transplant recipients reinforce the standpoint that this practice should be abandoned.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11255-007-9261-3 | DOI Listing |
Int Urol Nephrol
September 2008
Department of Nephrology, University Clinical Center, University of Skopje, Vodnjanska 17, 1000 Skopje, Republic of Macedonia.
Because of the limited chance of receiving a kidney transplant (for several well-known reasons), a lot of desperate dialysis patients procure an unrelated donor kidney transplant against all medical advice. This type of renal paid transplantation is associated with many surgical complications and invasive opportunistic infections that increase the morbidity and mortality in this group of transplant recipients. In this report, we describe a case of a 22-year-old girl with a segmental infarction of the graft lower pole and a complete pyelo-ureteral necrosis as a consequence of some vascular damage, complicated by a pathohistological finding of an invasive candidiasis.
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November 1994
Servicio de Urología, Hospital Ntra. Sra. de la Esperanza, Barcelona.
The authors explain their experience in a series of 317 consecutive RTs that resulted in renal inversion during transplantation surgery. The likely vascular complications as well as those of the excretory tract are correlated with the above situation of heterotopic graft. No differences have been noted due to placement with regard to necrosis of the ureter; stenosis of the passage, whether distally or at the pyelo-ureteral junction, have occurred in inverted kidneys but at a really low rate (1.
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