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transplant
(redirected from transplants)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

transplant

 or graft

Partial or complete organ or other body part removed from one site and attached at another. It may come from the same or a different person or an animal. One from the same person—most often a skin graft—is not rejected. Transplants from another person or, especially, an animal are rejected unless they are unusually compatible or have no blood vessels (e.g., the cornea), or if the recipient's immune reaction is suppressed by lifelong drug treatment. Transplanted tissues must match (by blood tests) more closely than blood transfusions. Monoclonal antibodies targeting the cells that cause rejection hold great promise. Tests are now under way with monoclonal antibodies that react with antigens present only on T cells that are participating in rejection, sparing the rest. Rejection matters less in skin grafts, which may need to last only weeks, and bone grafts, whose structure remains after the cells die. In bone-marrow transplants, the donor's marrow cells may attack the recipient's tissues, often fatally. Lung transplants have greater chance of success as part of a heart-and-lung transplant. See also heart transplant, kidney transplant.


transplant
Surgery
a. the procedure involved in such a transfer
b. the organ or tissue transplanted


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China Daily reported China performs the second highest number of organ transplants in the world, second only to the US.
Lynne Holt got involved in the games almost 30 years ago when she was in charge of intensive care at Papworth Hospital in Cambridge, where some of the country's first heart transplants were carried out.
Transplant Procedure With the smaller micro transplants, there is no longer the need to stamp holes in the scalp to accommodate plugs.
 
 
 
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