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India, Pakistan doctors perform joint liver transplant in Lahore

rama

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LAHORE: A group of Indian and Pakistani doctors have jointly performed a complicated liver transplant procedure at a hospital here, the first time such a procedure was conducted in Pakistan.

The living donor liver transplantations ( LDLT) were performed at Lahore's Shiekh Zayed Hospital yesterday by a team of Indian and Pakistani surgeons, officials said today.

LDLTs are "highly sensitive and complicated" surgical procedures as two lives - the donor and recipient - are at risk, doctors said.

The joint operations were done by Indian surgeon Subash Gupta, a senior transplant doctor of Apollo Hospital in Delhi, and three of his colleagues and the three-member Pakistani team of Tariq Bangash, Khawar Shahzad and Umer Ali.

"The joint venture of leading Indian and Pakistani transplant surgeons has made history by opening a new era of living-relative liver transplants in Pakistan," Bangish said.

The first liver transplant was performed on Khanum Maula and the liver was donated by his close relative Irshad Bibi.

The second surgery was conducted on 45-year-old Abida Parveen and the liver was donated by her 19-year-old son.

It took 12 hours for the surgeons to complete each sensitive procedure.

Both recipients were brought to Shaikh Zayed Hospital with complete liver failures.

The Indian doctors visited Pakistan to perform the transplants at the request of the Pakistani surgeons.

Before their arrival, surgeons at Shaikh Zayed Hospital finalised arrangements for the sensitive operations and prepared the donors and recipients.

The condition of all recipients and donors was stable and they were kept under observation in intensive care for 24 hours. Consultants were put on high alert for post-operative care of the patients for 24 hours, a highly sensitive period for all who undergo hours-long surgeries.

by TOIlet news
 
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Good Job. :tup:

Medical profession is the noblest of all.

And India & Pakistan have blood relations.

Hope further such examples of collaboration between India & Pakistan to save human life.

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More News:

Indian surgeons`support: Two liver transplant surgeries at SZH | Provinces | DAWN.COM

Indian surgeons`support: Two liver transplant surgeries at SZH

LAHORE, Feb 10: A team of leading surgeons of Pakistan and India has conducted two liver transplants at Shaikh Zayed Hospital.

The condition of the recipients and donors was said to be stable and they have been kept under observation for intensive care for 24 hours.

The living donor liver transplantation was conducted for the first time in the country. Earlier, a cadaver liver transplant was performed at Shaikh Zayed Hospital in August last year.

The transplantation was highly complicated surgery compared to the cadaver as two lives remained at risk. The operations were done by Indian surgeons Dr Subhash Gupta, a senior transplant surgeon of Apollo Hospital, Delhi, Dr Goyal, Dr Agrawal, Dr Alita, Dr Tariq Bangash, Dr Khawar Shahzad and Dr Umer Ali.

The first liver transplant was performed on Khanum Mola who belongs to tribal areas. The liver was donated to the recipient by his close relative, Irshad Bibi.

The second surgery was conducted on 45-year old Abida Parveen of Gilgit Baltistan and the liver was donated to her by her 19-year old son.

The Indian doctors visited Pakistan to perform transplant on the request of Dr Tariq Bangash. A source said earlier Dr Tariq had invited the senior liver transplant surgeons of the UK to perform the same surgeries in Pakistan but they refused owing to security concerns.

“The UK government had not allowed its surgeons to perform liver transplant in Pakistan, saying the country is facing serious security matters,” a source quoted a surgeon as having said.

They said the transplants were delayed owing to refusal by the British government. Later, Dr Tariq invited Dr Gupta and his team to Pakistan for the purpose.

A joint team of Pakistani and British surgeons had performed first cadaver liver transplant on Amir Raza of Sialkot at the same health facility in August last year. The liver was donated by matric student Arslan who had died in a road accident
 
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Why didn't they just do the surgery in an Indian hospital instead?
New skills need to be transferred so that subsequent operations can be performed in pakistan. Good work by both teams.
Araz
 
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not cool, we could've just asked the arabs or something :angry: what if they "accidentally" mis-handled the operation and killed the poor lady?
 
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Ramanujan.jpg


Thank You India.
 
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Good to see some cooperation for once. Though I wouldn't have picked something so dangerous...
 
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have a life, grow up.

My post was sarcastic. Sorry that I didn't add the quintessential smily. Meanwhile in another thread

It doesn't need the Indian rupee in millions to fund such activities. It's actually fairly cheap to fund small groups to cause havoc in a city like Mumbai. Blowing up a cycle would be enough to scare away investors and the average Mumbai India.

It's not the amount of destruction which does the most damage but the fact there is a continued threat but you won't get it.
 
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