| |
News from The York Dispatch 19.07.07
Pittsburgh hospital performs a rare
liver transplant
PITTSBURGH -- A 9-year-old boy suffering from a rare liver disease
received a donor liver and then had his old liver transplanted into
a 24-year-old man in a rare operation known as a domino transplant.
Doctors at Children's hospital of Pittsburgh said the surgery
performed late last month was a success and marked the first time
the hospital has performed a domino transplant with a child.
The procedure gets its name because the transplants are done
sequentially, with the first recipient getting an organ from a
deceased donor and then his organ being transplanted into a second
recipient.
Johnathan Devantier, 9, of St. Louis, was diagnosed as a newborn
with maple syrup urine disease, in which the body can't process
certain amino acids. He received a donor liver and his old liver was
transplanted into Ali Al-Garni, of Saudi Arabia, who suffers from a
genetic disease that can cause liver failure.
Devantier's maple syrup urine disease was not passed to the other
recipient in the surgery, said Dr. George V. Mazariegos, director of
pediatric transplantation at the hospital's Hillman Center for
Pediatric Transplantation. The disease does not originate in the
liver, but instead is caused by a lack of enzymes in the body,
making a domino transplant possible, he said.
"Domino transplants are rare because there are very few conditions
for which you can cure one patient with a transplant and then
transplant his or her organ into someone else without passing on the
disease," Mazariegos said. "MSUD is one such disease."
The procedure was the third domino transplant ever involving a
patient with maple syrup urine disease, according to the United
Network for Organ Sharing. More than 65 domino liver transplants
have been performed in the U.S.
Font:
http://www.yorkdispatch.com/sports/revolution/ci_6412435
<----back |
|