Organ Transplantation Journals

 The donor and recipient could also be at an equivalent location, or organs could also be transported from a donor site to a different location. Organs and/or tissues that are transplanted within an equivalent person's body are called autografts. Transplants that are as of late performed between two subjects of a proportional species are called allografts. Allografts can either be from a living or cadaveric source. Organs that are successfully transplanted include the guts , kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas, intestine, thymus and uterus. Worldwide, the kidneys are the most transplanted organs, followed by the liver and then the heart. Cornea and musculoskeletal grafts are the most transplanted tissues; these outnumber organ transplants by more than tenfold. Organ donors could also be living, dead , or dead via circulatory death. Tissue could also be recovered from donors who die of circulatory death, also as of cerebral death – up to 24 hours past the cessation of heartbeat. Unlike organs, most tissues are often preserved and stored for up to 5 years, meaning they will be "banked". Other ethical issues include transplantation tourism (medical tourism) and more broadly the socio-economic context during which organ procurement or transplantation may occur. A problem is organ trafficking. There is also the moral issue of not holding out false hope to patients. Transplantation medicine is one among the foremost challenging and sophisticated areas of recent medicine. Some of the key areas for medical management are the issues of transplant rejection, during which the body has an immune reaction to the transplanted organ, possibly resulting in transplant failure and therefore the got to immediately remove the organ from the recipient.