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Recommended Conferences for Domino Transplantation

Domino Transplantation


As per available reports about 2 relevant journals, 4 Conferences, 3 workshops are presently dedicated exclusively to Domino transplant and about 7 articles are being published on Domino transplant.

 Domino transplant  is a rare medical procedure involving different donors and recipients when. The transplants are carried out one after another, till the last donor in the chain donates to the first recipient. A previous attempt to perform a five-pair domino transplant failed in India last year when one of the recipients died while awaiting permission from their respective state (Andhra Pradesh). As a result, the whole procedure was jeopardized.

OMICS International Organizes 1000+ Global Events Every Year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific societies and Publishes 700+ Open access journals which contains over 100000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board and organizing committee members. The conference series website will provide you list and details about the conference organize worldwide. OMICS Group Journals encourages original and well researched articles for publication. With the help of a strong 50, 000 experts as editorial board members and reviewers, OMICS Group journals uphold the standard review process. All the articles submitted for publication are subjected to a blind peer review. Upon incorporating the changes the articles are published online. Once approved for publication, these articles remain archived permanently in their respective repositories. OMICS Group Journals follow online tracking system where the authors can submit their articles online and track its status from time to time.

Domino transplantation  is applicable for transplantation of liver. In Domino liver transplantation, a patient who himself undergoes transplantation in turn donates his liver to another recipient. It was being performed since the mid-1990. Although livers from a handful of metabolic disorders cured by liver transplantation have been used for domino transplantation, familial amyloidosis polyneuropathy (FAP) livers are by far the most common source. FAP is an inherited disorder never presenting its clinical manifestation before the age of 15. In many carriers, the genetic disorder never manifests during lifetime. Thus, only a proportion of patients with FAP develop disease symptoms, which has been the rationale for using such livers for other patients on the waiting list for liver transplantation. According to the Familial Amyloid tic Polyneuropathy World Transplant Registry (FAPWTR), only 2 out of more than 500 patients so far have developed symptoms after domino liver transplantation using an FAP liver. Domino recipients with non-malignant indications for liver transplantation show excellent long-term survivals. With careful selection of recipients, the procedure helps to reduce the organ shortage and the time on the waiting list for patients with malignant disorders.

In cystic fibrosis patients, where both lungs need to be replaced, it is a technically easier operation with a higher rate of success to replace both the heart and lungs of the recipient with those of the donor. As the recipient's original heart is usually healthy, it can then be transplanted into a second recipient in need of a heart transplant. Another example of this situation occurs with a special form of liver transplant in which the recipient suffers from familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy, a disease where the liver slowly produces a protein that damages other organs. The recipient's liver can then be transplanted into an older patient for whom the effects of the disease will not necessarily contribute significantly to mortality.

This term also refers to a series of living donor transplants in which one donor donates to the highest recipient on the waiting list and the transplant center utilizes that donation to facilitate multiple transplants. These other transplants are otherwise impossible due to blood type or antibody barriers to transplantation. The "Good Samaritan" kidney is transplanted into one of the other recipients, whose donor in turn donates his or her kidney to an unrelated recipient. Depending on the patients on the waiting list, this has sometimes been repeated for up to six pairs, with the final donor donating to the patient at the top of the list. This method allows all organ recipients to get a transplant even if their living donor is not a match to them. This further benefits patients below any of these recipients on waiting lists, as they move closer to the top of the list for a deceased-donor organ. Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore and Northwestern University's Northwestern Memorial Hospital has received significant attention for pioneering transplants of this kind.

The American College of Surgeons is an educational association of surgeons created in 1913. Headquartered in Chicago, Illinois, the College provides membership for doctors worldwide specializing in surgery who passes a set of rigorous qualifications. The American College of Surgeons is a scientific and educational association of surgeons that was founded in 1913 to improve the quality of care for the surgical patient by setting high standards for surgical education and practice.

 

List of Best International Conferences:

1.6th Clinical and Experimental Cardiology Conference

   November 30-December 02, San Antonio USA

2.Vascular Medicine and Surgeons Meeting Conference

   October 24-25, Chicago USA

3.7th World Cardiothoracic Meeting

   March 29-30, Atlanta USA

4.8th Global Cardiologists Annual Meeting

   July 18-20, Berlin Germany

5.2nd Pediatric Cardiology Conference

   September 22-24, Las Vegas USA

6.Primary Healthcare Conference

   April 25-27, Dubai UAE

7.Interventional Cardiology Conference

   Sept 12-14, Berlin Germany

8.2nd Biomechanics and Implant Design Conference

   May 12-14, 2016 Chicago, USA

9.3rd Global Experts Meeting on Weight Loss

   September 19-21, Vienna Austria

10.4th Surgery Conference

     October 05-07, Dubai UAE

11.Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Conference

     November 3-4, Istanbul Turkey

12.Podiatrist Meeting on Foot and Ankle Surgery

     August 15-16, Oregon USA

13.Transplantation Research and Techniques Conference

     March 28-29, Atlanta USA

14.Global Summit on Head and Neck Surgery

     November 30-December 01, Georgia USA

15.Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Conference

     October 03-05, Miami USA 

16.5th Orthopedic Surgeons and Rheumatology Conference

     March 31-April 01, Valencia Spain

17.Cosmetic Dermatology and Haircare Conference

     December 07-08, Philadelphia USA

18.4th Orthopedics and Rheumatology Conference

     October 26-28, Maryland USA

19.3rd Rhinology and Otology Conference

     April 25-27, Dubai UAE

20.11th Tremblant Vascular Surgery Meeting

21.13th Asia Congress of Endoscopic & Laparoscopic Surgery (ELSA)

22.13th Office Based Vein Surgery: International Vein Conference IVC

23.25th Australasian Gynaecological Endoscopy & Surgery Annual Scientific Meeting (AGES)

24.25th Peripheral Vascular Surgery Society PVSS Annual Winter Meeting

25.28th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST)

26.30th Annual British Virgin Islands Plastic Surgery Workshop

27.31st American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery Annual Meeting (AACS)

28.31st Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery (AACS)

29.38th Annual Meeting of the Southern Association for Vascular Surgery SAVS

30.42nd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery

31.5th American Society of Reconstructive Microsurgery Annual Meeting (ASRM)

 

Market Analysis:

Both developing and developed countries have forged various policies to try to increase the safety and availability of organ transplants to their citizens. Austria, Brazil, France, Italy, Poland and Spain have ruled all adults’ potential donors with the "opting out" policy, unless they attain cards specifying not to be. However, whilst potential recipients in developing countries may mirror their more developed counterparts in desperation, potential donors in developing countries do not.

 

International symposium and workshops

1) 1st International Workshop on the Hereditary Renal Amyloidoses and update of the non-TTR transplant registry

2) VIIIth International Symposium of Familial Amyloidotic Polyneuropathy and VIIth International Workshop on Liver Transplantation in Familial Amyloidotic Polyneuropathy

3) AATS AORTIC SYMPOSIUM WORKSHOP KOBE 2015

 

Relevant Society and Associations:-

•Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons

•American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons

•American College of Surgeons

•Royal Australasian College of Surgeons

•Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada

•Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh

•American College of Surgeons

•Ambulatory Surgery Centre Association (ASCA)

•American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS)

•American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons - ASCRS

•Society of Lapro-endoscopic Surgeons, Inc.

•Society of Thoracic Surgeons

•American Surgical Association: ASA

•American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons - AAOS

•The American Association for the Surgery of Trauma

•American Association of Neurological Surgeons

 

Companies:-

•Becton, Dickinson and Company

•Covidien

•Kirwan Surgical Products

•MAQUET Getinge Group

•Zimmer, Inc.

•A&S International

•Abott Vascular

•Cardinal Health

•Brasseler USA

•Cooper Surgical

•Stryker

•Mediflex Surgical Products

•Aspen Surgical Products

•Coloplast Corporate

•Henry Schein

•GORE

•Surgical Specialties Corporation

•Teleflex

This page will be updated regularly.

This page was last updated on December 23, 2024

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