Organ Transplantation Research - Risks, Prognosis, Procedure, Surgery

Organ Transplantation Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Organ Transplantation, including details on risks, prognosis, procedure, surgery.


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Recipient-derived cells in the tissue repair of renal allografts.

Wu Y, Liu Z, Ji S, Chen J, Zeng C, Li L

Research Institute of Nephrology, Jinling Hospital, Nanjing University School of Medicine, Nanjing, China.

To observe the roles of recipient-derived cells in renal allografts with acute cellular rejection (ACR), eight male patients who had received a female donor kidney were enrolled, with protocol renal allograft biopsies. Three of them suffered from ACR, and the other five with normal function. Biopsy sections were detected for the presence of recipient-derived cells and their phenotypes. Recipient-derived cells appeared in the tubular epithelium as early as 13 days posttransplant, with the phenotype of cytokeratin(+)/CD45(-). They also localized in the medium walls of arterioles and expressed alpha-SMA. In patients with ACR, recipient-derived tubular cells increased persistently during the first 6 months (3.8 to 6.6%). Long-term follow up showed a decline in their number when ACR ameliorated. In patients without ACR, the infiltration rate remained stable (0.6-2.3%). Recipient-derived cells participate the remodeling of renal allografts. They might have a close relationship with ACR outcome and with vascular structure remodeling.

Published 14 March 2006 in Transplantation, 81(5): 756-9.
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Organ Transplantation Books

Reproductive Tissue Banking: Scientific Principles

Reproductive Tissue Banking: Scientific Principles