Abstract

Kidney transplant has become a common surgical treatment for patients with end-stage chronic kidney disease. Chronic kidney disease in children is a major health problem in the world, with increasing incidence and prevalence. Uzbekistan is a young country, and surgeons were able to first perform kidney transplant surgery only in 2017. Here, we report a case of the first successful kidney transplant to a child in Uzbekistan. The patient, a 13-year-old boy with end-stage chronic kidney disease due to abnormal development of the urinary tract, received a kidney transplant from his father as a living donor. The diagnosis (abnormal development of the urinary tract, insufficiency of the vesicoureteral segment, and ureterohydronephrosis on both sides) was revealed when the boy was 4 years old, which resulted in vesicoureteral segment plastic surgery at diagnosis. Ten years later, the patient developed end-stage chronic kidney disease. At day 9 posttransplant, creatinine levels decreased from 0.53 to 0.043 mmol/L. Ultrasonography and Doppler imaging showed normal graft size and echogenicity and adequate flow in the renal and iliac vessels. The patient was discharged on posttransplant day 10 in good condition. For children with chronic kidney disease, the main cause is congenital abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tract. Kidney transplant in pediatric patients has become a common surgical procedure and is associated with high success rates. Early and accurate diagnosis and timely management of abnormal development of the urinary tract can reduce the rate of end-stage chronic kidney disease in children.

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