1986
DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(86)91608-9
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Hla-Matching and Pretransplant Blood Transfusions in Cadaveric Renal Transplantation—a Changing Picture With Cyclosporin

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Cited by 82 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…31 Also in large materials, a beneficial effect of HLAmatching was usually most evident with high degrees of HLA-matching. 6,27 The absence of a blood transfusion effect is in accordance with most reports during recent years 29,32 and it is probably generally agreed upon today that pre-transplantation blood transfusions should be avoided. 33 The major obstacle to transplantation in Saudi Arabia is the low donation rate from CD as well as LRD.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…31 Also in large materials, a beneficial effect of HLAmatching was usually most evident with high degrees of HLA-matching. 6,27 The absence of a blood transfusion effect is in accordance with most reports during recent years 29,32 and it is probably generally agreed upon today that pre-transplantation blood transfusions should be avoided. 33 The major obstacle to transplantation in Saudi Arabia is the low donation rate from CD as well as LRD.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…26 A surprising finding was the correlation between HLA-matching and GS in the CD series, especially considering the limited material. Such a correlation was reported in large multicenter materials 6,27,28 but was usually absent in smaller multicenter 29,30 and single center studies. 31 Also in large materials, a beneficial effect of HLAmatching was usually most evident with high degrees of HLA-matching.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…In Sweden the recommended plasma level the first month after transplantation is 100-500 gg/ml [12]. These concentrations of CyA only affected HSV production in vitro when cells were infected at low m.o.i.s (less then 0.1 PFU/cell).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Recent evidence suggests that the blood transfusion effect remains in certain circumstances, when one considers effects of HLA antigens, rejection episodes, and possibly the prospects of tolerance induction. In a single centre study of a notransfusion policy, the non-transfused group had more early rejection episodes (Lundgren 1986). Another study on the relation of rejection activity to previous blood transfusions showed that 63% of the 231 non-transfused recipients had rejection episodes during the first 60 days after transplantation, while 48% of the transfused patients had rejection (Toyotome 1987).…”
Section: History Of Blood Transfusion Effect In Clinical Transplantationmentioning
confidence: 99%