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Title: Cadaveric orthotopic auxiliary split liver transplantation and kidney transplantation: an alternative for type 1 primary hyperoxaluria. Author: Onaca N, Sanchez EQ, Melton LB, Netto GJ, Glastad KA, Martin PA, Ueno T, Levy MF, Goldstein RM, Klintmalm GB. Journal: Transplantation; 2005 Aug 15; 80(3):421-4. PubMed ID: 16082341. Abstract: Liver transplantation (LTX) corrects the enzymatic defect responsible for type 1 primary hyperoxaluria (PH1). It has been advocated in combination with kidney transplantation (KTX) in patients with renal failure from PH1 because KTX alone can result in early graft loss. A 58-year-old male patient with PH1 on hemodialysis underwent resection of the left lateral segment of the liver followed by orthotopic auxiliary left lateral segment liver transplantation and kidney transplantation from a deceased donor. The serum oxalate dropped from 34.8 micromol/L before transplant to 3.6-8.3 in the first months posttransplant to <1 micromol/L (normal range 0.4-3.0). One year after posttransplant, the patient has an iothalamate glomerular filtration rate of 58 ml/min. Orthotopic auxiliary LTX is an alternative to whole LTX in PH1. By using a split deceased donor liver, it does not deprive the donor pool and protects the recipient from liver failure in case of graft loss.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]