Want this question answered?
Can a transplant patient take Amoxicillin
Erythromycine
yes
cookies and milk
I believe you can
In safe doses (1g 4 times in 24 hours) it will be no problem. Paracetamol is metabolised by the Liver not the kidneys.
It is very hard to find a kidney transplant. In some countries it can take several years before you can get a transplant.
It depends on what protocol your transplant clinic uses. Mine does require 5mg daily.
whoever has a good kidney they can donate theirs Dialysis or kidney transplant. For a transplant, a willing donor with the same blood type has to be found. This could take years.
A kidney transplant is done under anesthesia. The doctor will make an incision in the abdomen, and will take out the old kidney and replace with the new one.
The more replacement parts a patient has, the greater the risk of tissue rejection. Transplantation is not without risk but not getting the transplant also carries its own share of risks. You really ought to take this question up with a surgeon or other medical professional if this is more than a hypothetical question.
Based on the source of donated kidney, kidney transplant can be classified as deceased donor or living donor transplant. Answer: To the question of HOW a kidney transplant is done. The donor kidney will be extracted including part of the urinary tract and vein/arteries. The blood is extracted from the kidney and it is flushed clean. Then transported on ice to where the recipient is. The donor kidney is transplanted into the person in their lower abdomen. They join the veins/artery etc to the recipients, having disconnected them from the existing bad kidney. They do not take out the recipients bad kidneys (unless it has tumour) but leaves them there, as no point in performing unnecessary surgery.