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July 8, 2009

Unlike diamonds, kidneys don't last forever

kidney surgery

With all of the talk about kidney transplants in recent days, one thing has been left unsaid: Many kidney transplants don't last forever.

About 50 percent of kidney transplants from live donors are still working at 20 years, which means many people will need repeat transplants. With more transplants being done than ever before, and being done so successfully, the number of repeat transplants has been on the rise in recent years.

I wrote this story last year. In talking with some pediatric nephrologists (kidney docs), they mentioned something I never knew, that kidney transplants, especially in younger people, are a wonderful long-term fix but not necessarily a permanent one. And that's not always because patients may reject a new kidney or get some other severe illness.

"We can't get the grafts to last forever," Dr. Alicia M. Neu, a pediatric nephrologist at Johns Hopkins Children's Center, told me at the time. "We've kind of hit a wall. People live with one kidney all the time. They donate one, and they're fine. ...

"Why is it that we transplant, and it's not fine?"

The most interesting factoid (one of the best I have come across since I started covering medicine): When patients need a new kidney, surgeons typically don't remove the malfunctioning ones. They stay where they are and just shrivel up. One women quoted in the story had 6 kidneys, several of them implanted in her pelvic region. There is a limit: Doctors had told her there wouldn't be room for anymore if this last kidney stopped working.

Photo courtesy of ABC

Posted by Stephanie Desmon at 10:22 AM | | Comments (0)
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About Picture of Health
Kelly Brewington came to the health beat a year ago after covering everything from education and government to race and immigration in her 11 years as a reporter. Since then, she has tackled stories on autism, heart failure and acupuncture used to treat drug addiction. She’s been fascinated by medicine since childhood, when her doctor dad and nurse mom gave her Gray’s Anatomy coloring book to play with. She also blames her early exposure to the field of medicine for her hypochondria.

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