Ask the Doctor
Questions about kidney disease? Risk factors? Signs and symptoms? Are you concerned about yourself, a friend or family member? Ask Dr. Spry.
For more information on Organ Donation please visit our A to Z Health Guide.
Living donation takes place when a living person donates an organ (or part of an organ) for transplantation to another person. The living donor can be a family member, such as a parent, child, brother or sister (living related donation).
Living donation can also come from someone who is emotionally related to the recipient, such as a good friend, spouse or an in-law (living unrelated donation).
In some cases, living donation may even be from a stranger, which is called nondirected donation.
The organ most commonly given by a living donor is the kidney. Parts of other organs including the lung, liver and pancreas are now being transplanted from living donors.
Transplants performed from living donors may have several advantages compared to transplants performed from deceased donors:
Although transplantation is highly successful, and success rates continue to improve, problems may occur. Sometimes, the kidney is lost to rejection, surgical complications or the original disease that caused the recipient's kidney to fail. Talk to the transplant center staff about their success rates and the national success rates.
You can find some statistics on the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) web site. UNOS compiles statistics on every transplant center in the United States. To view all UNOS data, go to http://optn.transplant.hrsa.gov/latestData/viewDataReports.asp. You can find statistics on the number of non-living and living donor transplants performed at that particular center, respectively, and the graft survival rates for the transplant recipient.
The best source of information on expected donor outcomes is from your transplant team. See the list of "Elements of Disclosure" at http://www.kidney.org/transplantation/livingDonors/pdf/jama_article.pdf (page 3) for a list of issues to discuss with your transplant team. You can also check http://www.transplantliving.org/livingdonation for additional information about donation and transplantation.
Click here for detailed statistics on short-term complications from living donation (as reported to the United Network for Organ Sharing).
Some transplant centers perform living donor liver transplants. If you are considering donating a part of your liver to a friend or family member, contact the person's transplant center for more information. If the transplant candidate does not yet have a transplant center, contact centers in the candidate's area for information.
Donating a section of a liver is riskier than kidney donation, and much less common. Transplanting a piece of the liver works because the liver regenerates itself in both the donor and recipient after transplantation.
Besides being in excellent physical and psychological health, the liver donor must undergo extensive examinations and testing. A radiological imaging of the liver is done to assess the anatomy, liver volume and size. A liver biopsy may be performed.
Most often parents donate a piece of a liver to a child. Adult to adult live liver transplant is still relatively rare.
We recommend talking to your transplant center about their experience and success rates, which can give you critical information to help you make a decision. You can find statistics and information about living donation on the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) web site at www.transplantliving.org.
The rest of this booklet relates to living kidney donation; talk to your transplant center for more information about liver donation.
Living lung donation involves two adults giving the right and left lower lobes from each respectively to an adult or pediatric recipient.
The potential donors' lungs must be the right size and volume. For adult recipients, the donors should be at least as tall as the recipient. Ideally, donors should not be overweight and should be non-smokers.
Potential donors receive a series of exams and tests including chest radiography, pulmonary function testing, ventilation-perfusion scanning and computed tomography, cardiac stress test.
Again, donating a lung is riskier than live kidney donation and the risks and benefits will be discussed with the transplant team.
Contact transplant centers for additional information about lung donation. You can find statistics and information about living donation on the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) web site at www.transplantliving.org. The rest of this booklet relates to living kidney donation; talk to your transplant center for more information about lung donation.
Blood and bone marrow donations save lives every day. For more information about blood donation, call the American Red Cross at (800) GIVE LIFE, or visit www.redcross.org.
For information about bone marrow or blood stem cell donation, contact the National Marrow Donor Program at (800) MARROW2 or at www.marrow.org.
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