In a Medical First, Doctors Transplant the Same Kidney Twice in Two Weeks
Human Organ for Transplantation via UWO Transplanting a kidney is a dicey enough proposition at first go, so the fact that Northwestern University doctors have transplanted the same kidney twice is nothing short of remarkable. Working under a set of extenuating circumstances, the surgeons transplanted the kidney twice in two weeks, and the final recipient--the third person to claim ownership of the organ--is reportedly doing well. The story started with a 27-year-old patient with a conditions known as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), which causes scar tissue on the part of the kidney that does the actual filtering of waste from the blood, leading eventually to kidney failure. The man received a kidney from his sister, but within days signs of his FSGS began to manifest themselves the new kidney, posing life-threatening complications. The new kidney had to come out--but, doctors thought, why discard an otherwise perfectly good organ when there...