• kidney transplants contain less risk compared to those made with other bodies.
• Failure is not necessarily fatal, since the patient is kept alive by the method of artificial kidney (dialysis), pending the availability of a new transplant.
• Despite the difficulties, people transplanted arriving to live for many years.
• Experts believe that the kidney provided by a living relative has certain advantages over the other. Studies tend to show that it is less rejected by the recipient organism's immune system.
What are the risks of a kidney transplant
• The kidney from a brother or sister of the patient is usually more compatible kidney tissue, but never accept donors under 18 years.
• A kidney transplant can be performed between 90 and 95% of cases of children affected by severe renal failure and dialysis.
• Kidney transplantation in children was introduced in 1960 or so.
• Most with transplanted kidneys continue a normal life free of signs and symptoms of deterioration or decline in kidney function.
• Sometimes, a consequence of renal transplantation is the stunting of children.
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