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    • James Hardy

      • James Hardy of the University of Mississippi performed the first human lung transplant on June 11, 1963. Following a single-lung transplantation, the patient, identified later as convicted murderer John Richard Russell, survived for 18 days.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lung_transplantation
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  2. Sep 4, 2017 · The first clinical attempt in humans was reported by Hardy and Webb in 1963 followed by others with short survival only except for one case by Derom et al. who lived for 10 months. Long-term successes were not reported until after the discovery of cyclosporine as a new immunosuppressive agent.

  3. James Hardy of the University of Mississippi performed the first human lung transplant on June 11, 1963. [6] [7] [8] Following a single-lung transplantation, the patient, identified later as convicted murderer John Richard Russell, [9] survived for 18 days.

  4. Apr 1, 2016 · Dr. James Hardy from Jackson Mississippi, USA was the first surgeon in the world to perform lung transplantation in man in 1963. The patient was a 58-year old man who had lung cancer involving the left main airway and obstructing distal airways resulting in lung collapse and recurrent pneumonia.

    • Gül Dabak, Ömer Şenbaklavacı
    • 2016
  5. Jan 19, 2024 · Consider the number of lung transplants a center performs each year and transplant recipient survival rates. You can review this information in a database on the web maintained by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients.

  6. May 18, 2022 · About 55% of lung transplant recipients have a survival rate of at least five years after a lung transplant. Other recipients have continued living for up to 10 and even 20 years. More energy .

  7. The first human lung transplant was performed on June 11, 1963, by Dr James Hardy ( Fig. 1) at the University of Mississippi. 2. The recipient was a 58-year-old male prisoner with emphysema who presented to the hospital with increased shortness of breath.

  8. Jul 6, 2018 · The first “successful” lung transplant, in which the recipient survived for 10.5 months, was reported by Fritz Derom in 1971. Ten years later, Bruce Reitz and colleagues performed the first successful en bloc transplantation of the heart and one lung with a single distal tracheal anastomosis.

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