In the UK I believe it's King's Hospital in London. With Birmingham QEH a close second.
Kidney transplants, followed by liver transplants, are most common.
Reduced-size liver transplants are most often performed on children.
Liver and kidney
Liver and kidney
They're not. Kidney and liver are the most common.
cornea and kidney. (and skin) Liver and kidney
Liver and kidneys.
Biliary atresia is the most common lethal liver disease in children, occurring once every 10,000-15,000 live births. Half of all liver transplants are done for this reason.
Kidney and liver are the two most commonly transplanted organs (excluding those which happened before 1950)
Kidney, liver, heart, heart and lung, pancreas and kidney together.
Kidneys, since the risk is relatively low as the original kidneys are not removed; a new one is just added in. Thus if the new one does not work there's no real harm done - you can try again.
A transplant surgeon basically transplants donated organs into someone's body that needs them. There are 4 types of transplants currently: Kidney Liver Pancreas Heart (done by cardiothoracic surgeons, not transplant surgeons in most cases)