Yes, you can! If, for example your bother has terminal kidney failure, you can donate one of your kidney's to him if your tissue types match. If your tissue type won't match you can even donate a kidney, by cross-linking yours with a receiver which matches. Not only kidney's, but also parts of the liver and I think also skin can be donated alive.
the other organ which can b donated while alive r lung,pancrease,bone marrow and intestine
It depends on the specific details of your past chemotherapy treatment and your current health status. Generally, individuals who have had chemotherapy may still be eligible to donate a kidney, but thorough evaluation by a healthcare provider will be necessary to assess your overall health and suitability for donation.
Yes, there is a difference. In a left kidney donation, the surgeon removes the left kidney from the donor's body, while in a right kidney donation, the right kidney is removed. The decision of which kidney to donate is typically based on the donor's anatomy and medical history.
A person who donates a kidney is called a living kidney donor.
You can survive with one kidney because it can do the work of both! However, people living with one kidney have to be very cautious of their lifestyle choices as leading an unhealthy life would lead to kidney failure faster than a person with two kidneys.
i think its the liver because when people have to donate one of theirs they still survive, but they have eat small. The system liver is on is the digestive system. I think you must mean kidney - human beings only have one liver
donating a kidney is when someone needs a kidney and you participate to go to surgery to remove you're kidney to give to the person in need. and you are left with one kidney but you will still live.
At the age of 10 you are a child and it is not legal to donate a kidney to someone.
blood, lung, kidney, ect...
Yes. Many people donate a kidney to friends or family members that have kidney failure. The donor then has one kidney and probably the recipient has one functioning kidney.
Kidney
Yes, certain organs, e.g., one of a person's two kidneys, or part of the liver, can be transplanted from a living donor.
No I believe that u have to be at least 18, like donating blood. But definitely no 12.
Blood Organs (Kidney, Lungs, Heart...etc.)
It depends on the quality of the kidney in question, no alot of people want dead kidneys so I'd say Alive.
no
100 years
No.