• Kidney transplant surgeon Dr. Mikel Prieto in surgery
    Minnesota

    Free Webinar for Donors and Patients on Living-donor Kidney Transplants

Kidney transplant surgeon
Dr. Mikel Prieto

ROCHESTER, Minn. — Prospective kidney transplant patients, families of adult and pediatric transplant candidates, and potential living kidney donors are invited to attend a free, public webinar about living-donor kidney transplants hosted by Mayo Clinic. Mayo Clinic is a leader in kidney transplants, performing approximately 550 kidney transplants each year and has one of the largest living-donor kidney transplant programs in the United States.

“As living organ donation, especially non-directed or ‘Good Samaritan’ donation, becomes more widely known and accepted, we want to provide more information about innovations in donation and transplantation,” says Mikel Prieto, M.D., surgical director of Kidney Transplantation at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. “We also want to provide a forum to answer questions for prospective donors, recipients, and their family members.”

What:  Free Webinar

When:  April 14 at noon CDT

Topic: What Patients and Donors Need to Know About Living-Donor Kidney Transplants

Host:  Mayo Clinic Kidney/Pancreas Transplant Program

Register:  http://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/interactive-webinar-what-patients-and-donors-need-to-know-about-living-donor-kidney-transplant/

MEDIA CONTACT: Ginger Plumbo, Mayo Clinic Public Affairs, 507-284-5005, Email: newsbureau@mayo.edu

Presenters include Mikel Prieto, M.D., surgical director of the Kidney/Pancreas Transplant Program; Carl Cramer, M.D., Pediatric Kidney Transplant Program medical director; and Phil Fischer, M.D., kidney donor and pediatrician; all at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

The hour-long webinar will feature Dr. Prieto and Dr. Cramer explaining the advantages of living-donor transplantation and what patients can do to be in the best possible condition for surgery. They will also explain pre-emptive kidney transplantation (transplantation before the patient requires dialysis), paired donation (when a patient and donor aren’t compatible with each other, but are compatible with another patient-donor team), and donor chains (when a willing, but incompatible donor for one patient gives to a stranger who also has a willing but incompatible donor who then gives to another stranger, and so on). In addition, Dr. Fischer will share his personal experience as a kidney donor. After the presentation, the physicians will answer audience questions, which can be submitted prior to or during the webinar.  The webinar will be archived online afterwards.

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About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit organization committed to medical research and education, and providing expert, whole-person care to everyone who needs healing. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about-mayo-clinic or https://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/.

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