Immunosuppression following organ transplantation part 2 - complications and their management

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Cajanding, Ruff

Issue Date

2018

Type

Article

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Advances in the care of patients who have had a solid organ transplant has led to a growing population of post-transplant patients, who are also living for longer. As a result of their longer life expectancy, transplant recipients often face a multitude of challenges, including optimising their immunosuppressive regimens and managing potential complications. Life-threatening infections, malignancies, and organ-specific toxicities are the complications post-transplant patients commonly encounter and these complications are often associated with increased morbidity and mortality, adverse graft functioning and survival, profound impairment in the patient's quality of life, and significant healthcare burden. This article, the second of two parts, gives an overview of the issues involved in the care of patients who are receiving immunosuppressants. The common complications encountered by post-transplant patients are discussed and their assessment, management, prevention and treatment explored.

Description

Citation

Publisher

License

Journal

British Journal of Nursing

Volume

27

Issue

18

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN

Collections