Abstract

A 60-year-old male with long-standing diabetes, hypertension, and smoking developed an end-stage renal disease that necessitated hemodialysis. His drive-by angiograms revealed significant carotid and iliac calcifications and a triple-vessel disease on cardiac assessment. The abdominal aorta, common iliac, and the vascular tree below were all heavily calcified, according to a computed tomography angiography. Concerned about the location of the donor renal artery anastomosis, the decision was taken to do a left native kidney nephrectomy and orthotopic renal transplant. End-to-end anastomoses were made between the donor renal artery and splenic artery and between the donor renal vein and the recipient native kidney renal vein. The patient is doing well after the transplant, and the graft is functioning excellently with a creatinine of 0.9 mg/dl.

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