Xenotransplant
Depends on what blood type the person receiving the transplant is. They have to be the same.
Yes, anyone can give anyone else an organ as long as everything is compatible, such as tissue and blood type.
This is bone marrow transplant. A compatible donor should be screen and crossmatch before they can perform the transplant.
No, not always. They must have the same blood group (which is not guarenteed by being related) or a universal blood group, and the same tissue type (which is even less of a guarentee).
No, 0 plus (O+) blood is not compatible with O- (O negative) blood for a kidney transplant. In blood type compatibility, O- can donate to any blood type, but O+ can only donate to other positive blood types (A+, B+, AB+, and O+). Therefore, a recipient with O- blood would not be able to receive an organ from a donor with O+ blood due to potential immune reactions.
That was a heart transplant.
Intestine transplants are the least common type of organ transplant, typically performed in cases of intestinal failure or disease that cannot be managed with other treatments. Due to the complexity of the surgery and the risk of complications, intestine transplants are less common compared to more common organ transplants such as kidney or liver transplants.
Type O is compatible with any other types (in that it can be donated to anyone). Type A is compatible ONLY with Type A and Type AB. Type B is compatible with itself and Type AB. Type AB is compatible with any of the others (it can receive from any of the other types).
An "allogenic" transplant is a human-to-human transplant. (A "xenogenic" transplant would be animal-to-human).
The first successful kidney transplant between identical twins.
Autologous = own marrow Allogeneic = transplant from a related (or tissue matched) donor. Syngeneic = transplant from an identical twin.
1954 first successful kidney transplant