Yes. There are a lot of people that are living today with only one kidney. If someone needs a kidney transplant because both of theirs have gone bad they can receive one from a donor so long as they match. So the person that has the transplant has one and the person who donated a kidney has one.Some people have to due to infections etc. You can survive with one kidney
Its blood donor and it means u donate blood to someone who needs it.
Knowing the ABO blood type is an important factor in determining a suitable match for blood donation, but it is not the only factor. Other factors such as Rh type and antigens must also be taken into consideration to ensure a proper match and prevent adverse reactions in the recipient.
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If you are discussing live organ donation, such as part of the liver or a kidney, and you are medically expected to need such a donation at some point, then yes your friend can be tested for matching to you prior to the need for a donated organ.
A donor can asses the needs of a charity by simply getting in contact with them and asking. Communication is key
The kidney either excrete or reabsorbes the fluid and electrolytes if the body needs it.
Dialysis is a artificial process to drain out unwanted water from blood this process is naturally done by kidney. Some however may have damaged or failed kidney which cannot carry out function properly needs dialysis.
No. Negative blood types must receive negative blood. AB- can receive AB-, A-, B-, or O- blood.Special blood types are AB+ (universal recipient) which can receive any blood type but only give to AB+, and O- (universal donor) which can give to any blood type but must receive only O- blood.
Yes! Definitely! Kidney Beans naturally are great and helps you loose weight, but don't just eat Kidney beans because one needs variety in one's diet!
Kidney's require more complex matching than other organs; for kidneys you must match tissue as well as compatible blood type. Kidneys also require higher dosages of immunosuppression than other transplanted organs (they reject easily). Obviously, the transplanted kidney also has to cope with filtering out all the immunosuppression; this puts additional stress on the kidney, which shortens the grafts lifespan.
Selling organs is highly illegal. No government can legislate the buying and selling of body parts because it is a long and complicated process. Your kidney also needs to be medically assessed by professionals before a transplant. Give someone the wrong kidney and you'll kill them, making you an accomplice in murder. Organs also have a limited life outside the body, the moment it is removed, the cells start dying, therefore killing the organ, even if it is frozen. You can donate your kidney professionally as a registered donor, but you may not sell it. Because it is illegal, there is no price tag on human kidneys (nor any other human body part), they are priceless.