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2007-06-15 22:30:35 · 3 answers · asked by BioProf 2 in Science & Mathematics Medicine

1- keep organ & give antilyphocyte
2- keep organ & give anticomp.
3- remove organ, give cyclosporine
4- remove organ, give saline+glucose

2007-06-15 22:32:39 · update #1

3 answers

I would do a doppler study and check for blood flow in the segmental vessels. If there is some flow it may be worhtwhile giving the kidney a chance. If there is no flow then remove the organ and obviously once you remove the organ there is no point in giving cyclosporine.

2007-06-16 05:47:56 · answer #1 · answered by Vinay K 3 · 1 0

Answer is 4...If a freshly transplanr¡ted organ becomes blue, it means that rejection (acute) has caused clogging of the arteries, and thrombosis is already present...
There is no point in leaving a n accutely rejected and thrombosed organ in the receptors body, after acute rejection, the proper action is remove it, and transfuse simple crystalois, such as saline or saline in dextrose...send the organ to pathology for further analysis...

2007-06-22 04:00:48 · answer #2 · answered by Sehr_Klug 50 6 · 0 0

They must remove the organ, because it is never going to work, and may cause a lot of trouble. It is not necessary to add cyclosporine to the postsurgical treatment, because there is no organ you are trying to prevent its rejection.

2007-06-16 08:16:49 · answer #3 · answered by drfjalonso 5 · 0 0

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