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1992:
Keown P A; Shackleton C R; Ferguson B M
The influence of long-term morbidity on health status and rehabilitation following paediatric organ transplantation.
European journal of pediatrics 1992;
151 Suppl 1(
):.
Driven by the technological and immunological innovations of the past decade, paediatric transplantation has evolved quickly to occupy an important clinical role in the management of vital organ failure. With this success, the focus of clinical attention has moved progressively from an institutional to a more comprehensive community perspective, and the long-term success of transplantation has assumed greater importance in the evaluation of risk and benefit. Five-year patient survival now exceeds 90% after living donor or cadaveric renal transplantation, 70% following heart or liver transplantation, and approaches 60% at 2 years for the more developmental procedures of heart/lung and lung transplantation. Successful transplantation is accompanied by compelling evidence of improved quality of life. The earliest and most prominent gain is in physical capability, with a progressive re-establishment of social and psychological functioning compared to age-appropriate developmental norms. More than 75% of long-term recipients are in school or employed with a high rating of life satisfaction. Rehabilitation is threatened, however, by the complications of long-standing organ failure and long-term immunosuppression. These principally encompass skeletal and developmental disorders, metabolic abnormalities, cardio-vascular disease, renal dysfunction, and chronic infection or malignancy arising as a result of impaired immune surveillance. Prevention or effective management of these debilitating sequelae is a principal goal in the changing paradigm of organ transplantation for the current decade.
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