Living Non-relative Donor Versus Deceased-Donor Kidney Transplantation: a Comparison of Mental Health for Iranian Recipients

被引:0
作者
Marjan Shamspour
Elaheh Yazdanpanah
Najmeh Shamspour
Jalal Azmandian
Fatemeh Yazdanpanah
机构
[1] Kerman University of Medical Sciences,Department of Psychiatry, Shahid Beheshti Hospital, School of Medicine
[2] Kerman University of Medical Sciences,Afzalipour Faculty of Medicine
[3] Kerman University of Medical Sciences,Cardiovascular Research Center, Institute of Basic and Clinical Physiology Science
[4] Afzalipour Hospital,Internal Medicine Ward
[5] Bam University of Medical Sciences,Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine
关键词
Kidney; Transplant; Quality of life; Surgery;
D O I
10.1007/s42399-023-01577-y
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mental health is a key factor in the evaluation of kidney transplant recipients. It is important to focus on the mental health of kidney transplant recipients from brain-dead donors (DD), which is gradually increasing in Iran, and to compare them with the common method of transplantation in Iran (living non-relative donor (LNRD)). Forty-four participants (26 LNRD, 19 DD) were selected using a purposeful sampling method. The statistical population was all kidney transplant recipients in Kerman from October 2019 to March 2020. The data collection tool was Goldberg General Health Questionnaire, and the information was analyzed by SPSS25 software. The results revealed that mental health and its components, including anxiety, depression, and physical and social functioning in all participants, were significantly lower after the surgery than before the surgery (P = 0.017). The mental health score in kidney transplant recipients from brain-death donors was higher after the surgery before the surgery, indicating the worse mental health status after the surgery in this group (P = 0.052). Depression after surgery in brain-dead transplant recipients was significantly higher than in the living donor recipients (P = 0.05). The study demonstrated that the mental health of patients is better in all components after the kidney transplantation. However, brain-dead post-transplantation recipients experience more depression than living non-relative donor recipients. This finding highlights the need for special attention to be given to the mental health of brain-dead post-transplantation recipients.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [11] Association between perioperative normal saline and delayed graft function in deceased-donor kidney transplantation: a retrospective observational study
    Nesseler, Nicolas
    Rached, Alexandre
    Ross, James T.
    Launey, Yoann
    Vigneau, Cecile
    Bensalah, Karim
    Beloeil, Helene
    Malledant, Yannick
    Garlantezec, Ronan
    Seguin, Philippe
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ANESTHESIA-JOURNAL CANADIEN D ANESTHESIE, 2020, 67 (04): : 421 - 429
  • [12] Minimally invasive robotic versus conventional open living donor kidney transplantation
    Pein, Ulrich
    Girndt, Matthias
    Markau, Silke
    Fritz, Annekathrin
    Breda, Alberto
    Stoeckle, Michael
    Mohammed, Nasreldin
    Kawan, Felix
    Schumann, Andre
    Fornara, Paolo
    Weigand, Karl
    WORLD JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2020, 38 (03) : 795 - 802
  • [13] Pilot feasibility research of Chinese version of kidney transplant questionnaire in recipients of living donor kidney transplantation
    Niu, Yujian
    Zhang, Wenxin
    Mao, Sha
    Gao, Yanhong
    Wang, Jianli
    Li, Jun
    Wang, Letian
    Guan, Zhaojie
    Shen, Zhongyang
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 2015, 8 (12): : 22570 - 22576
  • [14] Changes in quality of life (QoL) and other patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in living-donor and deceased-donor kidney transplant recipients and those awaiting transplantation in the UK ATTOM programme: a longitudinal cohort questionnaire survey with additional qualitative interviews
    Gibbons, Andrea
    Bayfield, Janet
    Cinnirella, Marco
    Draper, Heather
    Johnson, Rachel J.
    Oniscu, Gabriel C.
    Ravanan, Rommel
    Tomson, Charles
    Roderick, Paul
    Metcalfe, Wendy
    Forsythe, John L. R.
    Dudley, Christopher
    Watson, Christopher J. E.
    Bradley, J. Andrew
    Bradley, Clare
    BMJ OPEN, 2021, 11 (04):
  • [15] Comparative Analysis of Hepatitis C Recurrence and Fibrosis Progression Between Deceased-Donor and Living-Donor Liver Transplantation: 8-Year Longitudinal Follow-Up
    Jain, Ashokkumar
    Singhal, Ashish
    Kashyap, Randeep
    Safadjou, Saman
    Ryan, Charlotte K.
    Orloff, Mark S.
    TRANSPLANTATION, 2011, 92 (04) : 453 - 460
  • [16] Normothermic and hypothermic machine perfusion preservation versus static cold storage for deceased donor kidney transplantation
    Tingle, Samuel J.
    Thompson, Emily R.
    Figueiredo, Rodrigo S.
    Moir, John A. G.
    Goodfellow, Michael
    Talbot, David
    Wilson, Colin H.
    COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2024, (07): : CD011671
  • [17] Simultaneous Pancreas-Kidney Transplantation Versus Living Donor Kidney Transplantation Alone: an Outcome-Driven Choice?
    Venkatanarasimhamoorthy, Vishnu Swaroop
    Barlow, Adam D.
    CURRENT DIABETES REPORTS, 2018, 18 (09) : 67
  • [18] Mental health in children with living donor liver transplantation: a propensity score-matched analysis
    Huang, Mingzhu
    Hou, Yuchen
    Li, Wen
    Wang, Guanghai
    Gu, Guangxiang
    Xia, Qiang
    CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY AND MENTAL HEALTH, 2022, 16 (01)
  • [19] Clinical and economic analysis of short-course versus standard-course antithymocyte globulin (rabbit) induction therapy in deceased-donor renal transplant recipients
    Marfo, Kwaku
    Akalin, Enver
    Wang, Cuiling
    Lu, Amy
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH-SYSTEM PHARMACY, 2011, 68 (23) : 2276 - 2282
  • [20] Psychosocial impact of pediatric living-donor kidney and liver transplantation on recipients, donors, and the family: a systematic review
    Thys, Kristof
    Schwering, Karl-Leo
    Siebelink, Marion
    Dobbels, Fabienne
    Borry, Pascal
    Schotsmans, Paul
    Aujoulat, Isabelle
    TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL, 2015, 28 (03) : 270 - 280