No, since the testicles are still in the body of the man.
When sexuality comes in, unconditional love most probably becomes Conditional love. Any 1 of pair, would be more interested in sex, obviously he/she would be longing for this as many as times possible, which creates quarrel, n NO PEACE . .
You are limited to the events you can do. Your body becomes weaker and much more immune to disease. Related to any transplant, you are unable to act as a regular person
forensic scientists wear goggles so nothing becomes contaminated.
When a heart becomes available and is approved for a patient, it is packed in a sterile cold solution and rushed to the hospital where the recipient is waiting.
Because science is fueled by questions. The point at which scientists stop asking questions is when science becomes a theology.
If you mean a "xenotransplant", it is a transplant of animal organs to a human. These types of transplant are incredibly rare, since xenotransplantation just does not work long term - animal organs do not work in humans. (Sometimes xenotransplantation is used to bridge a gap for a very ill patient, until a human organ becomes available).
In the UK you would be put on a database of people waiting for a transplant. There would be a "score" system. Points are given according to certain criteria such as how urgent the transplant is etc. Then when an organ becomes available the database is searched for the next person in line that is a potential match. That is viewed as the fairest way.
Conclusion.
Sexuality has nothing to do with one's culture and moral beliefs. Sexuality, and homo sexuality, is a natural behavior of all the living beings. All beings have their own desires to fulfill any way they choose. If an act is performed with a clean and good intention then that will be considered acceptable. Love is a sacred feeling and when one becomes speechless to express this feeling they indulge in a physical intimate relationship that is a basic instinct.
Not for mild interstitial lung disease. However, if it becomes severe, limiting the ability of the lung to do any useful work of breathing (oxygen in and CO2 out), then a lung transplant may be the only thing that will help.
Enough to keep the recipient alive and hopefully healthy, so it's around 90-110% of the size of the recipient's original liver that is required. (You can survive with only 5% of your liver working, but obviously the liver transplant recipient wants to live, not merely survive (since you can "survive" whist being quite ill). If a liver becomes available, it would be silly not to transplant as much of it as possible to meet the size of the original, since this speeds up recovery time post-transplant - i.e the liver does not need lots of time to regenerate, since it's already the correct size).
Successful