Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
Organ donation question
7 Answers
I was watching or reading something the other day and i thought of this question so no real purpose except a curious mind.
When someone donates an organ the organ recipient has to take ant rejection drugs. What would happen if a father donated a kidney to his son for lets say 10 years and the son passed away could the organ be given back to the father, and if so would the father then have to start taking anti rejection drugs or would his body accept the organ as his own? One more question does the dna or cells change in the organ from the original owner to the recipients in any way, even a few cells?
When someone donates an organ the organ recipient has to take ant rejection drugs. What would happen if a father donated a kidney to his son for lets say 10 years and the son passed away could the organ be given back to the father, and if so would the father then have to start taking anti rejection drugs or would his body accept the organ as his own? One more question does the dna or cells change in the organ from the original owner to the recipients in any way, even a few cells?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have given this much thought and i feel that the answer, on balance is yes it can, but would it function for very long is the imponderable.
After 10 years, due to local infiltration of lymphocytes and T cells (part of the immune system) which may well have be suppressed and lying "dead" in the transplanted kidney making that kidney..."unsaleable...second hand"
There also may well be technical problems due to fibrosis and scarring making the removal difficult.
Now if Dad had the same blood group as son, then, although anti-rejection drugs may well be necessary for other anti bodies (intra nuclear) the re-transplant could take place........but hey! it is already passed it'e sell buy date so it would almost certainly be useless.
Best i can do ......;-)
After 10 years, due to local infiltration of lymphocytes and T cells (part of the immune system) which may well have be suppressed and lying "dead" in the transplanted kidney making that kidney..."unsaleable...second hand"
There also may well be technical problems due to fibrosis and scarring making the removal difficult.
Now if Dad had the same blood group as son, then, although anti-rejection drugs may well be necessary for other anti bodies (intra nuclear) the re-transplant could take place........but hey! it is already passed it'e sell buy date so it would almost certainly be useless.
Best i can do ......;-)