Delta State University Teaching Hospital (DSUTH) performs first kidney transplant, witnesses by the state governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan.
Surgeons and Nephrologists from the hospital in collaboration with a medical team from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in the United States of America operated on both the donor and recipient.
The partnership also covers training of the renal team in the university teaching hospital.
Governor Uduaghan said that the exercise was aimed at reducing health tourism in the state and in Nigeria.
He said:
“Kidney cases are becoming very rampant and a lot of Nigerians go outside Nigeria for treatment for such cases. The significance of what we are doing here is that it makes it cheaper for the patients. Averagely, from what I have discussed with the managing director of the hospital, it will cost about 1.5 to 2 million Naira for the full treatment.
We know that going outside, India, which is the cheapest, will cost up to 6 to 8 million Naira. So if we are able to hit it at 2 million Naira it will be cheaper for our patients.”
The patient operated upon is a 23-year-old boy who received the kidney from his mother. The surgery lasted for about two and a half hours.
The Lead Transplant Surgeon, Juan Arenas, said that the patient should be able to go home two days after the surgery.
“The patient should be able to go home by Wednesday. But if the patient is a little more involved, where surgery takes close to three hours, the patient has to be monitored for about a week in the hospital, to make sure the kidney is functioning well and that the drug levels are adequate.” Dr. Arenas said.
With the Delta State University Teaching Hospital, Oghara, joining a list of the few public hospitals that provide kidney transplant services in Nigeria, patients who may be thinking of traveling abroad now have home-made options.
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center is one of the leading medical education and biomedical research institutions in the United States.