No.
Cancerous tissue can be cut out (often completely - sometimes not) and the throat reconstructed but it cannot be transplanted.
You would have to ask an ENT (ear nose throat) specialist about that.
A kidney transplant is typically placed in the lower abdomen, near the pelvis. The new kidney will be connected to blood vessels and the bladder during the surgical procedure.
The heart transplant was a success.He was looking forward to the transplant.
anesthesiologist, an infectious disease specialist, a thoracic surgeon, an ear, nose, and throat (ENT) specialist, a cardiologist, and a transplant dietician who all perform with a high level of coordination
An "allogenic" transplant is a human-to-human transplant. (A "xenogenic" transplant would be animal-to-human).
a kidney transplant
A pancreas transplant
He received a kidney transplant
You have a "transplant assessment" at a transplant hospital. It usually involves ultrasounds, blood tests, MRI's, EEG's, ECG's, psychological assessments and a chest x-ray. (But that depends on what transplant you need). If, at the end of all that you are considered a suitable candidate for a transplant, your name is added to the waiting list for a transplant by the hospital's transplant coordinator.
Autologous = own marrow Allogeneic = transplant from a related (or tissue matched) donor. Syngeneic = transplant from an identical twin.
No -- there has never been a head transplant.
The past tense of transplant is transplanted.