Başkent Üniversitesi Yayınları
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Item A Fast and Safe Living-Donor "Finger-Assisted" Nephrectomy Technique: Results of 225 Cases(Başkent Üniversitesi, 2008-12) Hakim, Nadey S.; Canelo, Ruben; Papalois, VassiliosRenal transplant remains the treatment of choice for end-stage renal disease. It improves both the quality of life and the quantity of life in recipients. We present a living-donor nephrectomy technique that is less invasive than the conventional open flank incision. This technique involves only 1 incision and is smaller than the one used in the laparoscopic technique. We have successfully introduced this new technique at our center. The procedure may be done safely and is applicable in all potential donors regardless of the body mass index of the donor or the size of the surgeon’s hands. It provides excellent grafts and has allowed us to expand our living-donor program.Item Alteration of Direct and Indirect Effects of Cytomegalovirus(Başkent Üniversitesi, 2007-12) Kamar, Nassim; Rostaing, Lionel; Mengelle, CatherineFor recipients of a solid organ transplant, cytomegalovirus infection causes many pathological conditions including direct and indirect effects, most notably owing to the potency of the immunosuppressive medications used. Effects attributed to cytomegalovirus infection include graft rejection, decreased graft and patient survival rates, predisposition to other opportunistic infections, virally mediated malignancies, and various injuries specific to the transplanted organs (eg, accelerated coronary atherosclerosis following heart transplant, bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome in lung transplants, and vanishing bile-duct syndrome in liver allografts). Other indirect effects include posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders, posttransplant new onset diabetes, and recurrence of hepatitis C virus infection. Direct effects are related to viral burden, whereas indirect effects may be observed even in the presence of low levels of cytomegalovirus replication. Being a function of the interaction between the virus and the host’s immune and inflammatory responses, the underlying indirect effects of viral infection are not completely understood. Whereas it has been shown that cytomegalovirus prophylaxis can decrease the direct and indirect effects of the virus, recent data indicate that pre-emptive therapy has no long-term impact upon the indirect effects. Prevention of cytomegalovirus-related indirect effects might be achieved only with prophylaxis.