00:00So, this was a new year that we had a laparoscopic donor, a single donor in the world, a dual
00:08-lob transplant.
00:09Usually, dual-lob transplant is two open donors.
00:12So, our team had a laparoscopic donor in the past 6-7 years.
00:23So, we were confident that if we had two laparoscopic donors, we would go to success.
00:30So, we need a big team.
00:32Because if we have two surgeries, we need a team double.
00:35We need equipment instruments double, training double.
00:38Because there is a staff, there is a staff training.
00:41So, because we cannot risk the donor's life,
00:44we cannot risk the donor's life.
00:45So, after training, we have two, three simultaneous surgeries.
00:51Laparoscopic liver and the patient.
00:54So, this is different from our surgeries.
00:57This is the first surgery in the world.
00:59So, this is the first surgery in the world.
01:01How did you know this?
01:03How did you know this?
01:03We have researched and checked the online articles,
01:07published and articles.
01:08We saw the public in the world.
01:13Also, we have seen some research on my own.
01:15So, we have recognized that there is no report.
01:19Number one.
01:20Number two.
01:21I think we all have made the research for many people in India.
01:25The two donors are twenty-eight years.
01:28So, the two numbers have become less than age.
01:29can be any complications in which you can get a lot of complications because as the age grows,
01:38the body's system starts to break. So, in young age, they can be tolerated.
01:43Why do you need two donors?
01:45Because the recipient of the patient was very big, 130 kilos.
01:49He needed 800-1000 grams of liver, so for one child, it was 400-500 grams of liver.
01:55How did the patient come here?
01:58How did the patient come here?
02:01Our previous patients tell us that you can go there and get a good transplant.
02:05So, we have a patient from Kyrgyzstan.
Comments