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Lung transplantation in children
Authors:MO Hoekstra  W van der Bij  WJ de Boer  B Wijnberg-Williams  J Gerritsen  WM van Aalderen
Affiliation:Afd. Kinderlongziekten, academisch Ziekenhuis, Groningen.
Abstract:The first lung transplantation in the Netherlands was carried out in 1990. Since, the operation has been performed in over one hundred adults and two children (up to 16 years) with chronic respiratory insufficiency. Most lung transplantations in children are performed because of cystic fibrosis. After referral, the patient is given information about the operation and the pre- and postoperative periods, and the transplantation team advises on the time of screening. Some one-third of the children referred ultimately undergo transplantation; the others refrain from the operation, are rejected or die during the waiting period. Owing to a shortage of donor lungs the waiting period for transplantation may last over one year. A possible but controversial solution is donation of a pulmonary lobe by a close relative. Undergoing lung transplantation places a heavy (psychic) burden on the patient and his parents. Every patient after lung transplantation goes through an average of two or three periods of acute rejection. Chronic rejection occurs in 20-40%. Other complications are connected to medication (infections, renal dysfunction) or to the underlying disease (diabetes mellitus in cystic fibrosis). The percentages of survival for 1, 2 and 4 years are approx. 60-70, 55-60 and 30-50, dependent in part on the type of lung transplantation (unilateral, bilateral or combined heart-lung transplantation). A reasonable condition of the patient owing to timely referral is a positive prognostic factor.
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