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Southern medical journal · Sep 1984
Case ReportsRenal transplantation in a developing country: anesthesia and other considerations.
- J A Youngberg, J L Hussey, A W Grogono, W M O'Neill, and G D Frentz.
- South. Med. J. 1984 Sep 1;77(9):1095-7, 1106.
AbstractThe Renal Transplant Team at Tulane University Medical Center has been involved in training a multispecialty group of Guatemalan physicians to perform renal transplantations in Guatemala. The purpose is to train the physicians in their own country, using available equipment and personnel so that they can perform successful operations in our absence. This paper is a review of the considerations involved in the initial renal transplantation done in Guatemala by the Tulane Renal Transplant Team. The need for a preliminary site visit was paramount. Personnel, facilities, and both surgical and anesthesia equipment and supplies were carefully evaluated. The recipient was a 22-year-old man with end-stage renal disease due to chronic glomerulonephritis. The donor was a healthy 33-year-old brother. This article is not intended to review renal transplantation in the United States, but to show what is feasible in a developing country where many drugs and equipment are not available.
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