Living Donor Kidney Center

Â鶹¸ßÇå: Kidney and Pancreas Transplantation, Surgery
Upper East Side
1283 York Avenue, 9th Floor
New York, NY 10065
Mon-Fri 09:00am - 05:00pm
Call
(212) 746-3099

There are two options when it comes to kidney transplantation – a transplant from a deceased donor, or from a living donor.   The primary advantages of living kidney donation are that recipients receive a transplant far sooner than is possible by waiting on the list for a deceased donor kidney, often before needing to go on dialysis.  In addition, there is a higher success rate after living donor transplantation and the kidney lasts longer than a deceased donor kidney. 

Family members, friends, or other acquaintances often offer to donate a kidney to a patient in need through living organ donation. The risk to a donor's physical health is minimal in both the short-term (surrounding the surgery) and long-term (in terms of kidney function, high blood pressure, and the donors lifespan).

Our Living Donor Booklet:  contains additional important information about the living kidney donation process that potential living donors receive during their evaluation.

All potential donors must be evaluated for donation by a living kidney donor team that functions completely independently of that of the transplant candidates' team. The job of the living donor team is to protect the potential donor not only their physical health, but also their psychosocial, emotional and socioeconomic well-being and personal preferences.

The Donor Team exists to ensure that the potential kidney donor:

-Is not himself/herself at high risk for developing kidney disease, usually caused by chronic health problems such as high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity, either now or in the future

-Does not feel coerced into donating 

-Is not putting himself/herself at psychosocial, emotional, or socioeconomic risk by donating

 

Living Kidney Donation

In this video, Dr. Sandip Kapur, Chief of Transplantation, discusses living donor kidney transplantation.

Living With One Kidney

 in which Dr. Del Pizzo, Director of Laparoscopic and Minimally Invasive Surgery for the Department of Urology talks about living with one kidney after kidney donation.

 

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