Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!

Introduction: Renal transplantation is the wisest option for patients with end-stage renal disease. Due to less availability of organs for transplantation, professionals are compelled to use organs from expanded-criteria donors. Urolithiasis in the to be transplanted kidney of donor is considered a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abhiyutthan Singh Jadaon, Chandra Pal Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2024-12-01
Series:Indian Journal of Transplantation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/ijot.ijot_33_24
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841556785475878912
author Abhiyutthan Singh Jadaon
Chandra Pal Singh
author_facet Abhiyutthan Singh Jadaon
Chandra Pal Singh
author_sort Abhiyutthan Singh Jadaon
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: Renal transplantation is the wisest option for patients with end-stage renal disease. Due to less availability of organs for transplantation, professionals are compelled to use organs from expanded-criteria donors. Urolithiasis in the to be transplanted kidney of donor is considered a relative contraindication due to the complications from stone in recipients like infection leading to sepsis, urinary tract obstruction, and also loss of allograft function. Therefore management of stones is needed, prior to transplanting that kidney. Material and Methods: A retrospective study was undertaken to identify those living renal donors who underwent ex vivo stone removal on the bench before transplantation. Results: In the time period of 2021 and 2023, we carried out 208 living donor Renal transplants at different centers in Rajasthan, Delhi & Haryana, INDIA. Of these, 32(18.2%) donor kidneys had to undergo ex vivo bench surgery for the removal of the stones. Discussion: In our study none of the grafts undergoing stone surgery showed evidence of stone recurrence at the follow-up examination. In all recipients those underwent bench URS had kidney graft survival was 96.8% after long-term follow-up. Conclusion: To date, there are no definitive criteria for the surgical management of urolithiasis from living donors. In this study we report our surgical experience and long-term follow-up in a series of living kidney donors (LKD) with asymptomatic kidney stones, after ex vivo ureterorenoscopy (URS) for stone removal before kidney transplantation.
format Article
id doaj-art-4bf8bc03c2b14818b6731fc36103fa8f
institution Kabale University
issn 2212-0017
2212-0025
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
record_format Article
series Indian Journal of Transplantation
spelling doaj-art-4bf8bc03c2b14818b6731fc36103fa8f2025-01-07T06:12:53ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Transplantation2212-00172212-00252024-12-0118439339610.4103/ijot.ijot_33_24Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!Abhiyutthan Singh JadaonChandra Pal SinghIntroduction: Renal transplantation is the wisest option for patients with end-stage renal disease. Due to less availability of organs for transplantation, professionals are compelled to use organs from expanded-criteria donors. Urolithiasis in the to be transplanted kidney of donor is considered a relative contraindication due to the complications from stone in recipients like infection leading to sepsis, urinary tract obstruction, and also loss of allograft function. Therefore management of stones is needed, prior to transplanting that kidney. Material and Methods: A retrospective study was undertaken to identify those living renal donors who underwent ex vivo stone removal on the bench before transplantation. Results: In the time period of 2021 and 2023, we carried out 208 living donor Renal transplants at different centers in Rajasthan, Delhi & Haryana, INDIA. Of these, 32(18.2%) donor kidneys had to undergo ex vivo bench surgery for the removal of the stones. Discussion: In our study none of the grafts undergoing stone surgery showed evidence of stone recurrence at the follow-up examination. In all recipients those underwent bench URS had kidney graft survival was 96.8% after long-term follow-up. Conclusion: To date, there are no definitive criteria for the surgical management of urolithiasis from living donors. In this study we report our surgical experience and long-term follow-up in a series of living kidney donors (LKD) with asymptomatic kidney stones, after ex vivo ureterorenoscopy (URS) for stone removal before kidney transplantation.https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/ijot.ijot_33_24ex vivo ureterorenoscopykidney transplanturolithiasis in donor
spellingShingle Abhiyutthan Singh Jadaon
Chandra Pal Singh
Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!
Indian Journal of Transplantation
ex vivo ureterorenoscopy
kidney transplant
urolithiasis in donor
title Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!
title_full Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!
title_fullStr Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!
title_full_unstemmed Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!
title_short Bench Surgery for Urolithiasis in Renal Transplant: A Sensible Option!!
title_sort bench surgery for urolithiasis in renal transplant a sensible option
topic ex vivo ureterorenoscopy
kidney transplant
urolithiasis in donor
url https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/ijot.ijot_33_24
work_keys_str_mv AT abhiyutthansinghjadaon benchsurgeryforurolithiasisinrenaltransplantasensibleoption
AT chandrapalsingh benchsurgeryforurolithiasisinrenaltransplantasensibleoption