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Academic literature on the topic 'Liver recipient'

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Books on the topic "Liver recipient"

1

Noorani, Hussein Zafer. Criteria for selection of adult recipients for heart, cadaveric kidney, and liver transplantation. Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment, 1999.

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2

Niosi, Goody. Ordinary people, extraordinary lives: Recipients of the Order of British Columbia. Heritage House, 2002.

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3

Humar, Atul. Clinical utility of quantitative cytomegalovirus viral load determination for predicting cytomegalovirus disease in liver transplant recipients. National Library of Canada, 1999.

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4

S, Musick Judith, Ladner Joyce A, and Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation, eds. Lives of promise, lives of pain: Young mothers after new chance. Manpower Demonstration Research Corp., 1994.

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5

Don't call us out of name: The untold lives of women and girls in poor America. Beacon Press, 1998.

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6

Jr, Gregory Gaines. Greg: A Liver Transplant Recipient. AuthorHouse, 2007.

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7

Jou, Janice, and Christopher D. Pfeiffer. The “Achilles’ Heel” of Liver Transplantation. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199938568.003.0212.

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Abstract:
These case studies illustrate infections encountered in hospitals among patients with compromised immune systems. As a result of immunocompromise, the patients are vulnerable to common and uncommon infections. These cases are carefully chosen to reflect the most frequently encountered infections in the patient population, with an emphasis on illustrations and lucid presentations to explain the state-of-the-art approaches in diagnosis and treatment. Common and uncommon presentations of infections are presented while the rare ones are not emphasized. The cases are written and edited by clinicians and experts in the field. Each of these cases highlight the immune dysfunction that uniquely predisposed the patient to the specific infection, and the cases deal with infections in the cancer patient, infections in the solid organ transplant recipient, infections in the stem cell recipient, infections in patients receiving immunosuppressive drugs, and infections in patients with immunocompromise that is caused by miscellaneous conditions.
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8

Limaye, Ajit P., and Lynne Strasfeld. Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199938568.003.0200.

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Chapter 2 focuses on the solid organ transplantation (SOT). The Solid organ transplantation (SOT) is undertaken to restore organ function for patients with failing or end-stage disease of the liver, heart, lung, kidneys, and/or pancreas or to re-establish function in patients with short gut or other disorders of the intestinal tract. Organ transplantation requires lifelong maintenance immune suppression to prevent organ rejection. Infection can be related to donor transmission, reactivation from latency in the recipient, or acquisition de novo post-transplant. The evaluation of suspected infection in SOT recipients is guided by the clinical presentation, with likelihood shaped by prophylaxis strategies, host factors, and exposure history. Prompt evaluation is critical, often requiring multimodality imaging, microbiologic testing with cultures and molecular diagnostics, and invasive diagnostics or biopsy. The chapter concludes that, through use of biomarkers and indicators of pathogen-specific immune competence as well as better laboratory assessment of overall immune competence, a more granular identification of those SOT recipients at highest risk for infection will allow for optimization of prophylaxis and other infection prevention strategies.
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9

Welfare that works: The working lives of AFDC recipients. Institute for Women's Policy Research, 1995.

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10

Moore, Professor Kevin, Dr Marcus Harbord, and Dr Daniel Marks. Gastroenterology and hepatology. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199565979.003.0008.

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Chapter 8 discusses gastroenterology and hepatology as it relates to acute medicine, including presentation, examination, and investigations, acute upper GI bleeding, acute gastroenteritis, jaundice, complications of cirrhosis, acute liver failure, infections and the liver, complications in liver transplant recipients, pregnancy and the liver, inflammatory bowel disease, acute pancreatitis, and malnutrition and chronic gastrointestinal disease.
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