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Liver transplant - Let's support each other

Transplants | Last Active: 4 days ago | Replies (1563)

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@keggebraaten

@rosemarya and @contentandwell and others,
Great discussion about the transplant list and deceased donors versus living donors. I spoke with our medical director and she may be able to help clarify why the need for all patients to be listed. Doctors perform a thorough evaluation on the recipient whether they are getting a deceased donor or a living donor transplant. The qualifications for receiving a transplant need to be met by the recipient for both deceased and living donation. The reason he is placed on the list is mostly a logistic reason – the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) tracks transplants and patients for both deceased and living donation, and there is only one list. Every patient getting a transplant is placed on the UNOS list. The doctors determine if patients qualify for transplant, and then they determine if living donor transplant is the best option for that patient, but the list we enter the patient into tracks all the information for future use. I hope that makes sense. Please ask if you have more questions.

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Replies to "@rosemarya and @contentandwell and others, Great discussion about the transplant list and deceased donors versus living..."

@keggebraaten Thanks for the info. I did figure that all of the same tests had to be done of course, but I believe @bwebster93 was confused thinking that they needed a cadaver liver to be available before being able to have a living donor -- "We were told he had to go through the list and be put on it for a cadaver liver before mine will be considered". I was pretty sure that there must have been a miscommunication with the transplant center.
JK