Transplant surgery is a difficult area for international patients, since availability of donor organs can be restricted to nationals or those from a limited area. Some areas of transplant surgery are open however, e.g. those involving the removal of organs or parts of organs from a live donor, usually but not necessarily a family member.
MHL currently features the following centre for transplant surgery
University Medical Centre (UKE), Hamburg, Germany
The Clinic of Hepatobiliary and Transplant Surgery offers interdisciplinary treatment of tumours of the liver, biliary tract and gall bladder and liver, kidney and pancreas transplants. It is led by Prof Björn Nashan and is the largest transplant centre in Northern Germany, with nearly 200 transplants performed.
Transplant
Important note to all patients
MHL (Medilux Healthcare Ltd.) promotes selected clinics and certain specialities within individual hospitals, where we believe the standards of care and medical equipment to be exceptional. We provide you with general information and details of how to make contact with the centre.
Sometimes we provide a dedicated e-mail address and we pass your enquiry to the relevant department but we cannot advise or enter into correspondence about individual cases and we do not arrange or facilitate treatments. All the centres that we feature have international patient enquiry services which will be pleased to answer your questions about services and costs.
Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf
Where a patient has a suitable donor prepared to offer a kidney for transplant, both donor and recipient can travel together for treatment.
Similarly liver donor liver transplant has become more common, where a portion of the donor's liver is transplanted. The liver has great powers of regeneration and in a successful operation the donor's liver will substantially regrow and the transplanted portion will also grow to significant proportion of normal liver size.
This is a highly complex area of surgery and rigorous screening of both donor and recipient is required. Immuno-supression measures are required to prevent rejection of transplanted organs and careful monitoring is necessary for some time after the operations.
Ethical issues also arise on the sourcing of live donor or cadaver organs, so patients are advised to consider very carefully the record and experience of any hospital or surgeon offering transplant therapy.
Advanced treatment centres
Non-invasive medical technologies
Private medical centres
Visit the UKE Transplant Clinic page of our web site MHL Clinics
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