Doctors have performed a challenging 'Auto-Kidney Transplant' on a young patient. (Pixabay) 
Medical

Doctors implant both kidneys on the same side after transplanting the patient's kidneys from left to right

Doctors have performed a challenging 'Auto-Kidney Transplant' on a young patient, who had a history of a stone in the left ureter, the pipe connecting the kidney and urinary bladder at a private hospital in the capital city.

Author : NewsGram Desk

Doctors have performed a challenging 'Auto-Kidney Transplant' on a young patient, who had a history of a stone in the left ureter, the pipe connecting the kidney and urinary bladder at a private hospital in the capital city.

The department of Urology & Kidney Transplant of Sir Ganga Ram Hospital last month received a 29-year-old patient from Punjab who had a history of stones in the left ureter. A local Doctor from Punjab tried to remove the stone but during the process, 25-26cm of left ureter also came out along with the stone, said the hospital on Tuesday.

"In a normal patient, there is one kidney on the left and one on the right side and two ureters connecting these kidneys to the bladder. But in this case, we were surprised to see the left kidney lying alone without any connection with the bladder," said Dr. Vipin Tyagi, Senior Consultant, who operated on the patient.

"Since the patient was young and the intestine is not the ideal substitute for the ureter reconstruction. We decided to perform 'Auto-Kidney Transplant', which means in this patient taking the normal kidney out from the left side and bringing it close to the bladder on the right side and connecting it with blood vessels going from the abdomen to the right leg (External Iliac Vessels). Now both the kidneys are on the right side," he added further.

There is one kidney on the left and one on the right side. (IANS)

Dr. Tyagi further added: "The kidney was close to the bladder but with the gap of 4-5cms. So, we decided to reconstruct a tube of 4-5cms using the wall of the urinary bladder. As soon as this reconstructed tube was connected to the bladder, the blood flow to this kidney restarted and immediately urine started coming out through this tube."

"The options before us were either to remove the kidney or remake the missing connection between kidney and bladder by using intestine or perform kidney autotransplant," Dr. Sudhir Chadha, Co-Chairperson, Department of Urology, said.

Meanwhile, the patient has recovered well and has recently been discharged with both functioning kidneys on one side of the body (right side). (AA/IANS)

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