Abstract | PURPOSE OF REVIEW: RECENT FINDINGS: The transplant pathologist is a central member of the transplant team in all phases of solid organ transplantation and as such, plays an important role in the evaluation of early and late complications after ITx and MVTx. Central among the tools for the pathologist is the mucosal biopsy, used for discerning histopathological changes in the allograft. The principal complications seen in the late posttransplant phase are acute rejection, chronic rejection, infections, and a variety of other inflammatory conditions. In order to more precisely characterize these conditions, the transplant pathologist must also be able to utilize numerous other laboratory tests and panels of molecular biomarkers that serve as ancillary information to complement the biopsy impression. SUMMARY: Using this array of tools, the transplant pathologist is now able to provide rapid and precise information regarding the gastrointestinal (GI) transplant complications, a function that allows the clinical team to appropriately and successfully intervene and that helps contribute to the observed improvement in patient and graft survival.
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Authors | Phillip Ruiz |
Journal | Current opinion in organ transplantation
(Curr Opin Organ Transplant)
Vol. 17
Issue 3
Pg. 273-9
(Jun 2012)
ISSN: 1531-7013 [Electronic] United States |
PMID | 22476223
(Publication Type: Journal Article, Review)
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Topics |
- Biopsy
- Graft Rejection
(etiology, pathology)
- Graft Survival
- Humans
- Infections
(etiology, pathology)
- Intestinal Diseases
(etiology, pathology, surgery)
- Intestinal Mucosa
(pathology)
- Intestine, Small
(transplantation)
- Organ Transplantation
(adverse effects)
- Recurrence
- Short Bowel Syndrome
(surgery)
- Transplantation, Homologous
(pathology)
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