What is the hardest organ to get?

Lungs are the most difficult organ to transplant because they are highly susceptible to infections in the late stages of the donor's life. They can sustain damage during the process of recovering them from the donor or collapse after surgeons begin to ventilate them after transplant.
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What organs are needed the most?

Kidneys: Kidneys are the most needed and most commonly transplanted organ. Kidneys are responsible for filtering waste and excess water from the blood and balancing the body's fluids.
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What is the easiest organ to transplant?

The liver is the only visceral organ to possess remarkable regenerative potential. In other words, the liver grows back. This regenerative potential is the reason why partial liver transplants are feasible. Once a portion or lobe of the liver is transplanted, it will regenerate.
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What organ transplant is most common?

Kidney transplants are the most common type of transplant surgery; the least common single-organ transplants are the intestines.
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What organ takes longest to transplant?

For example, thoracic organs like the heart and lungs, can only remain viable for transplant after being outside of the body for four to six hours, while the liver can function for up to 12 hours and kidneys up to 36 hours.
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What is the hardest organ piece? | Chiff Chat Ep. 1



Can I donate my heart while still alive?

The heart must be donated by someone who is brain-dead but is still on life support. The donor heart must be in normal condition without disease and must be matched as closely as possible to your blood and /or tissue type to reduce the chance that your body will reject it.
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What organ has the biggest waiting list?

Waiting lists

As of 2021, the organ with the most patients waiting for transplants in the U.S. was kidneys, followed by livers. Over 100 thousand patients were in need of a kidney at that time.
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What organs can you live without?

You can still have a fairly normal life without one of your lungs, a kidney, your spleen, appendix, gall bladder, adenoids, tonsils, plus some of your lymph nodes, the fibula bones from each leg and six of your ribs.
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Can you live without a liver?

No. Your liver is so vital that you cannot live without it. But it is possible to live with only part of your liver.
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Who Cannot donate organs?

Certain conditions, such as having HIV, actively spreading cancer, or severe infection would exclude organ donation. Having a serious condition like cancer, HIV, diabetes, kidney disease, or heart disease can prevent you from donating as a living donor.
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Can a female donate a kidney to a male?

Conclusions. Our results suggested gender matching for kidney transplant. Only in some exceptional conditions, male donor to female recipient kidney transplant may be successful and female donors to male recipients are not suggested, especially in aged patients with the history of dialysis.
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Can a female donate liver to male?

Livers from female donors yielded significantly poorer results, with 2-year graft survival of female to male 55% (95% CI, 45% to 67%); female to female, 64% (95% CI, 54% to 77%); male to male, 72% (95% CI, 66% to 78%); and male to female, 78% (95% CI, 70% to 88%).
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What is the youngest age a person has had a heart transplant?

A six-day old premature baby has become the youngest infant to receive a heart transplant at a US hospital, doctors and her proud parents said Thursday.
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What organ can grow back?

The liver has a unique capacity among organs to regenerate itself after damage. A liver can regrow to a normal size even after up to 90% of it has been removed.
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Can I donate my liver to my dad?

Any member of the family, parent, sibling, child, spouse or a friend can donate their liver. Generally, liver donors must: Be at least 18 years old.
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Can you donate your eyes?

Who can donate? The good news is that almost everyone can donate their eyes or corneas after their death. Eye donors can have any eye colour, blood type or level of eyesight. Donor age is not as important as it is for other organs or tissues – most eye donors are in their 70s.
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Do we have 2 livers?

No, the human body does not have two livers; it only has one. However, the liver has two large sections called lobes. The right lobe of the liver is...
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Can I donate my liver?

Donating your liver is usually something that happens after you die, but it is also possible to give the gift of living liver donation. If you are fit and well, it may be considered possible to remove part (a lobe) of your liver for transplantation to someone else.
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Is my liver OK?

If you find yourself experiencing liver pain, it could be a sign of a more serious medical condition. The liver is an organ that filters the blood and performs other important functions in the body. Signs that your liver is not functioning properly include fatigue, abdominal pain, jaundice and other symptoms and signs.
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What is the most useless body part?

Appendix. The appendix is perhaps the most widely known vestigial organ in the human body of today. If you've never seen one, the appendix is a small, pouch-like tube of tissue that juts off the large intestine where the small and large intestines connect.
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What is the least useful organ?

The appendix may be the most commonly known useless organ.

While plant-eating vertebrates still rely on their appendix to help process plants, the organ is not part of the human digestive system.
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Why do humans have 2 kidneys?

They help your bones stay healthy, tell your body when to make new blood cells, and even help you stay upright when you're walking around all day by taking care of your blood pressure. With all those important functions, scientist think having two kidneys must be important for our survival.
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What organ transplant has the lowest success rate?

The least productive repeat procedure, liver transplantation, adds only about 1.5 life-years per recipient. In sum, across all solid organs, 2.3 million life-years have been added through 2017; we project that the total will exceed 4 million.
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Is there an age limit on transplants?

There is no standard age limit to be transplanted. Each transplant program sets its own practice. For example, one program may not accept anyone older than 80 years of age; another may have no age limit. A few medical conditions might rule out a transplant.
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Why do kidney transplants only last 10 years?

While transplanted organs can last the rest of your life, many don't. Some of the reasons may be beyond your control: low-grade inflammation from the transplant could wear on the organ, or a persisting disease or condition could do to the new organ what it did to the previous one.
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