The hospital/school that you are
donating to covers all cost except transportation to facility
Along a midsagittal plane.
o
a dead body, esp. a human body to be dissected; corpse.
skeletal system
I'd say donor. Donator makes no sense and it's not really in most dictionaries.
A deceased donor, or simply an organ donor. They used to be referred to as a cadaver donor but that term has fallen out of favor.
It comes from a dead organ donor
Someone who has donated their body to medical science after their death.
It means you are receiving a kidney from a deceased person, not a living donor.
A kidney from a brain-dead organ donor used for purposes of kidney transplantation.
Kidney transplantation involves surgically attaching a functioning kidney, or graft, from a brain dead organ donor (a cadaver transplant), or from a living donor, to a patient
He will go on a waiting list for a cadaver donor liver. He will get the transplant and live for his expected life-span. If no cadaver liver donor is available, they will treat him symptomatically and try to find a living donor among relatives who are compatible. If none is found, his long-term prognosis is not good. Half a liver from a living donor will regenerate and both the donor and the recipient will have an entire liver after a few months.
In the UK the donor's hospital pays for everything connected with the donation process and the recipients hospital (if different) pays for all the costs involved with the recipient side of the transplant. Neither donor nor recipient pay for any of it.
That is difficult to say as there are other factors that need taking into account. But a kidney from a living donor should last at least half as long again or more, assuming most other factors are the same.
No the recipient is responsible for treatment costs.
They identify who the cadaver is.
The abbreviation CD has several applications in the healthcare fields. Some examples are: Childhood Disease Cardiac Dysrhythemia Celiac Disease Cadaver Donor Cannabis Dependence Cardiovascular Disease