Lanka Hospitals' world-class kidney care experience
More than fifty years ago, on December 23rd 1954, a kidney was
transplanted from one healthy identical twin to his twin brother who was
dying of renal disease. The operation was successful, renal function was
restored, and the donor suffered no ill effects.
This was the first successful transplant, performed against a
background of failure. For this reason it created enormous excitement,
both in the media and amongst medical professionals, at a time when the
pioneers of kidney transplanting were despondent about the possibility
of any real clinical application.
Kidney transplanting has remained an enormously exciting field and
can be considered a medical miracle of the 20th century.
A living donor kidney transplant is the preferred course. A living
donor transplant is the transplanting of an organ - or part of an organ
- from a living donor to a recipient.
And as the most common form of living donor transplant, more than
one-third of all kidney transplant recipients now receive one of the two
kidneys from a living donor.
Addressing advanced cases such as these, today, the Kidney Care
Centre at Lanka Hospitals offers comprehensive and specialised care for
kidney disease and related problems which may lead to such transplants.
It provides dialysis and kidney transplants by the best and most
respected nephrologists in the country.
The Centre performs more transplants than any other hospital in Sri
Lanka, and is focused on performing more cadaveric and paediatric
transplants.
According to Dr Wimal Karandagoda, Director Medical Services of Lanka
Hospitals, "the hospital has done the highest number of transplants
compared to any other private hospital in Sri Lanka since 2003."
Adding that even at present Lanka Hospitals performs the highest
number of transplants in the country compared to any other hospital in
the private sector.
"We also have a transplant coordinator, a doctor who coordinates
between the nephrologists and the centre, between the ethical committee
and the specialist doctors etc, to ensure the patient gets the best
possible clinical outcome and personalised service."
According to the Director Medical Services, in another interesting
case, a 46 year old man suffered cardiac arrest in the hospital elevator
and was resuscitated by a resident cardiologist who happened to be
travelling in the same elevator.
He was later transferred to the ICU where he was found to have both
heart disease as well as kidney failure.
He initially underwent bypass surgery and three months later had a
kidney transplant.
"We have carried out many post-bypass kidney transplants successfully
- where patients who have both heart and kidney problems have to first
have heart bypass surgery done and subsequently a kidney transplant.
The centre has also carried out many other transplants with an almost
100 percent success rate," he said.
The Lanka Hospitals Kidney Transplant Unit at the Kidney Care Centre
has six different teams performing transplants regularly for both
paediatric and adult kidney transplants.
This unit has the ability to carry out Laparoscopic Donor Nephrectomy,
where kidneys from donors can be removed with the smallest of cuts. The
hospital also has a separate transplant ICU, with dedicated doctors and
nurses 24 hours a day, and has done the largest number of kidney
transplants in the private sector to date.
The unit has the ability to carry out both live and cadaver
transplants.
According to Consultant Resident Nephrologist of Lanka Hospitals Dr
Sujith Somiah, it has a donor selection and ethical committee and
strictly follows the Tissue Transplant Act of Sri Lanka.
He also said that the Kidney Care Centre at Lanka hospitals has high
focus on general nephrology dialysis and transplantation.
"I am proud to state that our transplant program is extended beyond
Sri Lankan shores.
We actively support other countries that do not have their own
transplant programs - such as Fiji and Maldives.
Once approved by the government of the respective country, where the
donor and the recipient both are from the same country, we facilitate
the health care system of those countries by including the patients into
our transplant program and the transplant is performed by our team at
Lanka Hospitals" stated CEO of Lanka Hospitals Lakith Peiris. They have
been very successful with the holiday dialysis package for foreigners
who come to Sri Lanka to spend their holiday as well.
The hospital carries out assessments and treatment for tourists
according to the advice of the doctors in their own country.
He further added that Lanka hospitals is the only health care
institution in Sri Lanka that does and is capable of doing nuclear scans
for transplant kidneys.
Senior Medical Officer and Coordinator of the Kidney Care Centre Dr
Niroshini Ganegoda stated that standard treatment carried out at the
centre include Haemodialysis - High Flux/Low Flux which temporarily
eliminates harmful body waste, extra salt and extra water, controls
blood pressure and maintains proper chemical balance; Peritoneal
Dialysis which filters waste, chemicals, and extra water from your body
using the lining of your abdomen to filter your blood; and Dialysis
Catheter Insertion, the process by which blood is transferred between
the Haemodialysis machine and the patient.
The recently expanded unit boasts of the latest technology in the
form of new machines from Germany, which also feature online blood
pressure monitoring and these machines are continuously disinfected to
ensure safety against hospital associated infections.
"I consider the Kidney Care Centre an area that gives immense value
to the hospital and is a fine testimonial to the fact that Lanka
Hospitals is a provider of comparatively superior medical care - all in
a patient centred, family focused environment coupled with personalised
care.
Lanka Hospitals gives every patient a positive experience that they
have never experienced before in the hospital industry" stated the CEO
of Lanka Hospitals.
"The Kidney Centre will make a distinct contribution by helping to
alleviate the suffering that people with kidney disease undergo every
day."
|