Living Donation (An Overview) – Discussion

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dina omar
dina omar
2 years ago

Great lecture thank you

Mahmoud Hamada
Mahmoud Hamada
2 years ago

Thanks for the informative lecture.

Marius Badal
Marius Badal
2 years ago

great and informative lecture.

Manal Malik
Manal Malik
2 years ago

Thanks for informative lecture

AMAL Anan
AMAL Anan
2 years ago

Thank for very important lecture

Mohamed Ghanem
Mohamed Ghanem
2 years ago

Many thanks for this great lecture

Asmaa Khudhur
Asmaa Khudhur
2 years ago

Thank you

rindhabibgmail-com
rindhabibgmail-com
2 years ago

Good day, Impressive lecture professor!,
My question is there are also steroid free regime for diabetic patients to proceed for Transplantation, but the best regime is currently (Tac, MMF, plus good induction if we free with corticosteroids regime), the most common cause of NODAT is CNIs(Tacrolimus).
If a Patient with well controlled DM, HTN then how to proceed then!

Nashwa salah Mahmoud Ahmed
Nashwa salah Mahmoud Ahmed
2 years ago

thank you for the informative lecture

Hussam Juda
Hussam Juda
2 years ago

Thank you

amiri elaf
amiri elaf
2 years ago

We gain grate from this smart lecture , thank you prof

Dalia Ali
Dalia Ali
2 years ago

Thank you prof

Batool Butt
Batool Butt
2 years ago

thank you for the great lecture

Hoon Loi Chong
Hoon Loi Chong
2 years ago

Thanks for the great lecture.

Tahani Ashmaig
Tahani Ashmaig
2 years ago

Very informative and comprehensive lecture. Thanks

Mahmud Islam
Mahmud Islam
2 years ago

one of the comprehensive lectures in this module

dina omar
dina omar
2 years ago

Thanks prof Faisal for great lecture
but I have concern regarding Diabetic donors even if mild diabetes I think there will be a risk for deterioration of GFR
thanks prof

Reem Mohamed
Reem Mohamed
2 years ago

Thank you prof. Very informative lecture

Sameh Arman
Sameh Arman
2 years ago

thanks dr shaheen
question : some doner after kidney donation get slightly high creatinine then improve gradual again
is it considered AKI episode? there any impaction on his kidney function latter ?

Amna Khalifa
Amna Khalifa
2 years ago

learned alot from your talk. thanks

Mohammed Sobair
Mohammed Sobair
2 years ago

Thank prof.for nice guide to donors perspective

Mahmoud Wadi
Mahmoud Wadi
2 years ago

IN our center 122 donor listed within 11 years of donation
only 3 donor developed HTN

Mahmoud Wadi
Mahmoud Wadi
2 years ago

I would to ask our Prof Halawa
How do you proceed 18 yeras old male donor no history of kidney disease , normotensive and family history was irrelevent only complaining from left flank pain and hematuria ?
we done all investigation but no detected any glamerular disease .(all investiagtion + u/s + cystoscope was normal).
thanks

Mahmoud Wadi
Mahmoud Wadi
2 years ago

Thanks very much Prof. Faisal for the high informative lecture

Hinda Hassan
Hinda Hassan
2 years ago

Great lecture

Abhijit Patil
Abhijit Patil
2 years ago

Thanks sir for that wonderful and detailed talk.

Sir, I have a query, if a donor presents with microscopic hematuria and CT urography, urine cytology, culture and scopy is normal. he doesnt have dysmorphic RBCs on urine routine. Does he still need renal biopsy before accepting as donor?

Osama Hendam
Osama Hendam
2 years ago

Very interesting topic and very informative , thanks so much

Wee Leng Gan
Wee Leng Gan
2 years ago

great talk

Rahul Yadav rahulyadavdr@gmail.com
Rahul Yadav rahulyadavdr@gmail.com
2 years ago

Dear Prof Halawa/Prof Sharma,

We have a practice of enrolling Type 2 Diabetic donors only if more than 45 years of age, no end organ damage or significant family history of DM/DN after well informed consent.

As per study by Prof Ibrahim and statistics by United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS),median progression time from onset of DM to nephropathy is around 30 years

What is your recommendation for “lower cut off age” to select a Type 2 diabetic donor, as a potential donor if other parameters(like no end organ damage, normotensive, no significant family history of DM/DN, well informed and no other related/unrelated donor available) kept constant?

Huda Al-Taee
Huda Al-Taee
2 years ago

Thanks Prof Shaheen for the great talk

Ahmed Omran
Ahmed Omran
2 years ago

Great thanks to Prof Faisal for comprehensive talk highlighting different practical points

Alaa eddin salamah
Alaa eddin salamah
2 years ago

Thank you professor Faisal for this comprehensive lecture.

Naglaa Abdalla
Naglaa Abdalla
2 years ago

Thank you for this interesting lecture.
would a graft from an old living donor more than 60 years who expected to have some sclerosed renal cells, live long in a younger recipient of 25 years for example?

Maksuda Begum
Maksuda Begum
2 years ago

Thank you Prof. Faissal, for concise fruitful lecture, regarding the post donation risk.
Thanks a lot.

abosaeed mohamed
abosaeed mohamed
2 years ago

thank you , sir , practical & simplified .

Esraa Mohammed
Esraa Mohammed
2 years ago

Thank you, interesting lecture

Zahid Nabi
Zahid Nabi
2 years ago

Thanks prof for a nice lecture. Selecting appropriate donor is tough task and I fully agree that we should avoid very young donors specially for older recipients

Hussam Juda
Hussam Juda
2 years ago

Thank you professor. should we consider now DM not absolute contraindication for donation?

Ramy Elshahat
Ramy Elshahat
2 years ago

Thanks, professor Faisel for the excellent presentation?
My question is related to calculators used to give the risk of donation.
What is the best one based on your clinical experience????

Ramy Elshahat
Ramy Elshahat
Reply to  Ramy Elshahat
2 years ago

also, in the presentation, you mentioned potential donors with IGT but you didn’t give us the answer to this question
should I accept or reject them?

Nashwa salah Mahmoud Ahmed
Nashwa salah Mahmoud Ahmed
2 years ago

A lot of thanx dr Faisal for the nice lecture

Mohamad Habli
Mohamad Habli
2 years ago

Thank you

Mugahid Elamin
Mugahid Elamin
2 years ago

Nice

Nadia Ibrahim
Nadia Ibrahim
2 years ago

thank you professor for the simplified lecture, and clear points you mentioned to guide us during careful donor selection, after all we aim not to do harm . all respect

Isaac Abiola
Isaac Abiola
2 years ago

Good day all, please i need our opinion on this case:
19 years old Nigerian lady with CKD 20 to biopsy proven FSGS on dialysis for 3/12
Mother is 42 years and willing to be the donor
No family hx of CKD
All preliminary investigations are fine for the donor
Can she still donate in view of the FGSS in the daughter
THANKS

MOHAMMED GAFAR medi913911@gmail.com
MOHAMMED GAFAR medi913911@gmail.com
Reply to  Isaac Abiola
2 years ago

i think yes , as primary FSGS presentiaon ususally early , and if her lab is ok no protenuria , she can sfely donte

Isaac Abiola
Isaac Abiola

thanks

Ibrahim Omar
Ibrahim Omar
2 years ago

thank you for this lecture

abosaeed mohamed
abosaeed mohamed
2 years ago

thank you professor faissal , i like the last slide answering the questions alot

Nasrin Esfandiar
Nasrin Esfandiar
2 years ago

THANK YOU FOR THIS INFORMATIVE LECTURE.

Khalida Bulhan
Khalida Bulhan
2 years ago

I really enjoyed this lecture. It was so relevant and answered so many of the questions we regularly encounter. Thank you professor.
I personally will not take donors below the age of 25 years, not only because we live in a predominantly African population who are high risk genetically, but also because our social culture is quite risky when people are in the twenties, with high consumption of alcohol in general and experimentation with drugs of abuse. I would like data locally to show me that I am wrong though:D

Huda Saadeddin
Huda Saadeddin
2 years ago

Thank you prof for this informative lecture

Eusha Ansary
Eusha Ansary
2 years ago

Short, crisp with full of information. Thanks a lot sir.

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