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- F R Pruvot, C Noel, N Declerck, A S Valat-Rigot, D Roumilhac, M Hazzan, F Puech, and G Lelièvre.
- Unite de Transplantation, Hopital Calmette, CHU, Lille, France.
- Transplantation. 1997 Feb 27;63(4):615-6.
AbstractPregnancy is now a common, but high-risk event, in young women who have received transplants. Consequences to the fetus are known, but pregnancy may also interfere with graft function. We report the outcome of two successive and successful pregnancies in a 29-year-old woman with type 1 hyperoxaluria, who received a combined liver and kidney transplant. Two healthy children were born at 35 and 37 weeks of gestation, with low birth weight. Liver function remained normal before, during, and after pregnancies up to 52 months after transplantation. Renal function was impaired before the first conception, worsened during both pregnancies, and returned to the previous level in both immediate postpartum periods. However, renal function has declined 17 months after the last delivery. This report shows the feasibility of successive pregnancies in multiple organ transplant recipients, but raises the question of long-term maternal kidney graft survival.
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