Successful robot-performed liver donor transplant performed at Aurora UCHealth

Loading

By Nicole C. Brambila and Noah Festenstein

Surgeons at UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital’s transplant center in Aurora performed what is believed to be the first robotic liver transplant surgery on a living donor in the Rocky Mountain region, officials announced in a news release.

“We are never satisfied with where we are,” said Dr. Elizabeth Pomfret, Chief of the Division of Transplant Surgery at UCHealth, in the release.
Read the full story in The Denver Gazette.

Loading

Tampa General Hospital Achieves Record Number of Organ Transplants

Loading

For close to 50 years, Tampa General Hospital has been a national leader in life-saving organ transplantation. In 2022, the TGH Transplant Institute performed 682 transplants, a 20% increase in the number of procedures over 2021. According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), the national rate of transplants grew by 3.7% in 2022 over 2021. Read more in the West Orlando News.

Loading

Mercy Medical Center and UMMC offer a Liver Transplant Clinic to help transplant patients

Loading

The Center for Liver and Hepatobiliary Diseases at Mercy in conjunction with the University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC) offers a Liver Transplant Clinic to help patients through the liver transplant process.

Mercy hepatologists including Dr. Paul Thuluvath, Dr. Anurag Maheshwari and Dr. Hwan Yoo meet with UMMC transplant surgeons in hosting the clinic to evaluate patients who may benefit from a potential transplant. Read more in News Medical Life Sciences.

Loading

The Kidney Transplant Ecosystem Is Ripe for Reform

Loading

— Here are the policies and payment systems that need to change


For many patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) or end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), the treatment that provides the longest and best quality of life is a kidney transplant. Recently, the U.S. transplant system achieved a record milestone, with over 40,000 organ transplants performed in 2021. Despite this achievement, there are still many more people waiting years for a kidney than there are kidneys available. The transplant ecosystem, while functioning well, could be significantly improved with additional reforms. Read more in MedPage Today.

Loading

Dementia Risk Tied to Daily Step Count

Photo by Arek Adeoye on Unsplash
Loading

— Incident dementia dropped by 25% with as little as 3,800 steps per day, study found

A daily total of 3,800 to 9,800 steps was tied to lower dementia risk, longitudinal data from the U.K. Biobank showed.

The optimal dose of daily steps — the value with the highest dementia risk reduction — was 9,826 steps (HR 0.49, 95% CI 0.39-0.62), according to Borja del Pozo Cruz, PhD, of the University of Southern Denmark in Odense, and colleagues. Read more in MedPage Today.

Loading

Skin Cancer After an Organ Transplant: Risks, Prevention and Treatment

Loading

As a transplant recipient, you seek to protect your health in many ways, including taking immunosuppressant medications. By preventing your immune system from rejecting your new organ, these therapies play a critical role in your care. But they also come with side effects, including an increased risk for skin cancer.

Fortunately, you can work with your doctors to prevent skin cancer or detect it early, when it’s most treatable. Getting screened for skin cancer during appointments, checking yourself for skin changes at home and following sun protection guidelines can help keep you healthy. Read the full article on CareDx.com.

Loading

Symptoms of insomnia, sleep apnea associated with increased mortality risk

Loading

Symptoms of insomnia and sleep apnea were associated with a 56% increased risk for all-cause mortality, researchers reported in Sleep Epidemiology.

“Insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea are the two most common sleep disorders, each occurring in 10% to 30% of the general population, but in many patients the conditions can occur at the same time in what we call comorbid insomnia and sleep apnea,” Alexander Sweetman, PhD, co-author and a research fellow at the Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health at Flinders University in Australia, said in a release from the university. Read the full story in Healio.

Loading

Unhealthy lifestyle drives high blood pressure in children, teens

Loading

Lifestyle modification, including increased physical activity and a healthy diet, is the “most important step” in the management of cardiometabolic risk factors driving hypertension in children and teens, according to a consensus statement.

The new consensus statement focusing on hypertension in children aged 6 to 16 years, published in European Heart Journal, notes that inactivity, diets high in sugar and sodium, and excess weight account for nine in 10 cases of hypertension in children and adolescents. Read more in Healio.

Loading