BACKGROUND: Kidney transplantation is the definite surgical treatment for end-stage renal disease. Shortage of organs and the increasing number of patients with end-stage renal disease has led to an expansion of the selection criteria promoting the use of organs from marginal donors. Use of kidneys with renal artery aneurysm (RAA) is one such example. Description of the case: We report a case of living-related kidney transplantation from a 46-year-old female donor with unilateral RAA to her 68-year-old father. The pre-operative donor's assessment with a computed tomography angiogram revealed a saccular aneurysm of the left renal artery. The transplant team proceeded to the left nephrectomy, surgical ex vivo repair of the aneurysm and transplantation of this kidney to the recipient, with the total ischemic time of 130 minutes. At revascularization, there was no anastomotic leak with good perfusion of the organ and normal postoperative kidney function. CONCLUSION: RAA is a rare renal anatomical abnormality with unproven clinical significance. Advanced microvascular surgical techniques can be used to repair the aneurysm with subsequent successful use for transplantation. Hippokratia 2016, 20(1): 90-92.
BACKGROUND: Kidney transplantation is the definite surgical treatment for end-stage renal disease. Shortage of organs and the increasing number of patients with end-stage renal disease has led to an expansion of the selection criteria promoting the use of organs from marginal donors. Use of kidneys with renal artery aneurysm (RAA) is one such example. Description of the case: We report a case of living-related kidney transplantation from a 46-year-old female donor with unilateral RAA to her 68-year-old father. The pre-operative donor's assessment with a computed tomography angiogram revealed a saccular aneurysm of the left renal artery. The transplant team proceeded to the left nephrectomy, surgical ex vivo repair of the aneurysm and transplantation of this kidney to the recipient, with the total ischemic time of 130 minutes. At revascularization, there was no anastomotic leak with good perfusion of the organ and normal postoperative kidney function. CONCLUSION:RAA is a rare renal anatomical abnormality with unproven clinical significance. Advanced microvascular surgical techniques can be used to repair the aneurysm with subsequent successful use for transplantation. Hippokratia 2016, 20(1): 90-92.
Entities:
Keywords:
Renal artery aneurysm; ex vivo repair; living-related kidney transplantation
Authors: P K Henke; J D Cardneau; T H Welling; G R Upchurch; T W Wakefield; L A Jacobs; S B Proctor; L J Greenfield; J C Stanley Journal: Ann Surg Date: 2001-10 Impact factor: 12.969
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