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Kidney Transplantation—1964
GEORGE DUNEA, MB, MRCP;
SATORU NAKAMOTO, MD;
RALPH A. STRAFFON, MD;
WILLEM J. KOLFF, MD
Arch Intern Med. 1965;116(2):234-244.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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PATIENTS who are dying from uremia can now be helped by renal homotransplantation. Some physicians, however, look upon renal transplantation as an experimental procedure undesirable on moral 1 and economic grounds and unlikely to achieve more than a few months of miserable life. There are many who would defer renal transplantation until the fundamental immunologic problem has been solved. The results obtained in the last 18 months,2-8 however, suggest that renal homotransplantation is a therapeutic measure that deserves increased application.
Overall Results
There are now 23 living patients who have received renal homografts at the Cleveland Clinic Hospital (Table 1). Before transplantation these patients were in a terminal uremic state and had to be maintained by periodic hemodialyses. Many of the patients are able to lead normal lives, and some support their families. Thirteen patients are working and two boys have returned to school. Five of the living patients
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
CLEVELAND
From the departments of artificial organs and urology, the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Fellow, Department of Artificial Organs (Dr. Dunea).
Footnotes
Received for publication Dec 7, 1964; accepted Feb 2, 1965.
Reprint requests to 2020 E 93rd St, Cleveland, Ohio 44106 (Dr. Kolff).
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