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Encyclopedia of Health and Medicine

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lung transplantation 213<br />

cules follow the path <strong>of</strong> least resistance. During<br />

inhalation the air pressure within the alveoli is<br />

less than the air pressure outside the lungs. Oxygen<br />

molecules pass across the thin alveolar membrane<br />

<strong>and</strong> into the capillaries to enter the<br />

bloodstream. During exhalation the air pressure<br />

within the alveoli is greater than the atmospheric<br />

air pressure, inducing carbon dioxide molecules to<br />

cross from the capillaries into the air in the alveoli.<br />

For further discussion <strong>of</strong> the lungs within the<br />

context <strong>of</strong> pulmonary structure <strong>and</strong> function<br />

please see the overview section “The Pulmonary<br />

System.”<br />

See also EPIGLOTTIS.<br />

lung transplantation An OPERATION to replace an<br />

individual’s diseased lung with a healthy donor<br />

lung. Doctors performed the first successful lung<br />

transplantation in 1983 <strong>and</strong> now perform several<br />

hundred lung transplantations each year. A lung<br />

transplantation may involve one lung or both<br />

LUNGS. Less commonly a lung transplantation<br />

includes both lungs <strong>and</strong> the HEART, such as to<br />

treat primary PULMONARY HYPERTENSION with HEART<br />

FAILURE.<br />

Donor lungs come primarily from people who<br />

donate their organs upon death. Live lobular<br />

donation, in which a living donor undergoes surgery<br />

to have a lobe <strong>of</strong> the lung removed for transplantation<br />

(lobectomy), is occasionally a viable<br />

option for people who can find a tissue match<br />

among two prospective donors (usually family<br />

members) willing <strong>and</strong> medically capable <strong>of</strong> donating<br />

a healthy lung lobe (live lobular donation typically<br />

requires two lobes). Doctors most commonly<br />

consider living lobular donation as an option for<br />

children who have aggressive CYSTIC FIBROSIS.<br />

Many circumstances influence whether an<br />

individual is an appropriate c<strong>and</strong>idate for lung<br />

transplantation. Because donor lungs are in short<br />

supply, the criteria for transplantation are stringent<br />

though vary somewhat among transplant<br />

centers. In general, lung transplantation recipients<br />

must be under age 65, in good health except for<br />

their pulmonary conditions, <strong>and</strong> demonstrate willingness<br />

<strong>and</strong> ability to comply with the post-transplantation<br />

care regimen. Transplantation criteria<br />

nearly always exclude people who have cancer<br />

(lung or other), immunodeficiency disorders,<br />

active TUBERCULOSIS, neurologic or neuromuscular<br />

disorders, LIVER disease, or renal (kidney) disease.<br />

CONDITIONS FOR WHICH LUNG<br />

TRANSPLANTATION IS AN OPTION<br />

CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE<br />

PULMONARY DISEASE (COPD)<br />

bronchiolitis<br />

primaryPULMONARY HYPERTENSION<br />

PULMONARY FIBROSIS<br />

CYSTIC FIBROSIS<br />

BRONCHIECTASIS<br />

alpha-1-antitrypsin<br />

deficiency<br />

SARCOIDOSIS<br />

Surgical Procedure<br />

The operation for performing a lung transplantation<br />

is a THORACOTOMY, done with the person<br />

under general ANESTHESIA. The surgery generally<br />

takes three to six hours to complete. Typically one<br />

surgical team removes <strong>and</strong> prepares the donor<br />

lung <strong>and</strong> another surgical team removes the diseased<br />

lung from the person receiving the lung<br />

transplantation. A donor lung remains viable for<br />

only four to six hours. Most people are on CAR-<br />

DIOPULMONARY BYPASS during the surgery, though<br />

advances in surgical techniques are reducing the<br />

need for this. MECHANICAL VENTILATION during<br />

recovery <strong>and</strong> for up to 72 hours after surgery is<br />

common. A lung transplant recipient typically<br />

stays about 10 days in the hospital after the surgery,<br />

the first three to five <strong>of</strong> them in the intensive<br />

care unit (ICU). Recuperation <strong>and</strong> return to daily<br />

activities takes about three to five months for<br />

most people.<br />

Risks <strong>and</strong> Complications<br />

The most significant risk <strong>of</strong> lung transplantation is<br />

rejection <strong>of</strong> the transplanted lung. This risk is<br />

highest during the first four weeks after the surgery<br />

<strong>and</strong> remains a perpetual threat. The risk <strong>of</strong><br />

death, usually resulting from acute organ rejection,<br />

is highest during the first year after the transplant.<br />

People who receive organ transplants must<br />

take IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPY for the remainder<br />

<strong>of</strong> their lives. These medications block the IMMUNE<br />

SYSTEM from perceiving the transplanted organ as<br />

foreign <strong>and</strong> attacking it. Immunosuppressive therapy<br />

increases the risk for INFECTION. Infections such<br />

as INFLUENZA or PNEUMONIA can be life-threatening<br />

for people with organ transplants; most transplant<br />

programs require organ recipients to agree to<br />

receive annual immunizations to help protect

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