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Life After Transplantation


Know Your Pharmacist

Transplant recipients usually need to take an array of medications. Some will be new medications prescribed after transplant surgery. Some may be continued from before surgery. Certain medications may be taken several times a day while others are only taken on certain days. Transplant team doctors may have to change medications or adjust dosages every few days or weeks to find the best combination for maximum benefit and minimum side effects. In short, managing medications after transplant surgery can be complex and confusing.

Selecting a good pharmacy and getting to know your pharmacist can help you understand your medications and manage your medication schedule. Pharmacists can help explain effects and side effects of medications. Sometimes they can recommend tools like timers and organizers to help you keep track of medications. The social worker at the transplant center should be able to provide a list of pharmacies to choose from. Pharmacy services and prices vary. If you are not limited to particular companies by your insurance, shop around for lower prices and for features such as home delivery, refill reminders, and ability to speak with a pharmacist directly by phone or in person. Important questions to ask your pharmacist about pharmacy services and about medications are listed at Medications: Protecting Your Transplant Questions to Ask Exit Disclaimer and on page 43 of What Every Patient Should Know Exit Disclaimer.

Stay Healthy

Even years after surgery, doctors will continue to monitor the health status of both the transplanted organ and the whole body. Laboratory tests are a regular part of a transplant recipient’s life. Understanding the purposes of the tests can make it easier to follow specific instructions and get accurate results. Talk to your transplant team about what ongoing monitoring will be needed, how much can be done at home, and what will require visits to the transplant center or other locations.

Immunosuppressant medications that stop the body from rejecting the transplanted organ are also an important part of life after transplant surgery. In general, the suppressed immune system can be slower in defending against germs. Transplant recipients may be somewhat more vulnerable to infections and may find it more difficult to recover from certain infections and illnesses. This is especially true for the first 6 months after surgery but will remain an ongoing concern. Organ recipients can protect their health by practicing good prevention to avoid illness and injury and by seeking treatment early when illness does occur.

In general, healthy lifestyle options are good choices for organ recipients as they are for everyone. Following a low-fat diet, exercising regularly, and avoiding smoking promote the health of your new organ as well as the rest of your body. Your doctor and the transplant center dietician can help develop a plan for healthy diet and appropriate exercise during the healing process and a transition to normal healthy life afterwards.

Contact Your Donor Family

Sometimes organ recipients want to thank the family of their donor. Sometimes donor families want to check on the health and well-being of the person who received an organ from their loved one. The possibility of this human contact lifts the process of donation and transplantation above the mechanics of medicine and surgery and makes it a true sharing of life, gratitude, and love.

Transplant centers and OPOs are required by law to protect the confidentiality of donors and recipients. However, they can arrange for contact between the families when both sides agree. The process usually begins with a letter from the recipient to the donor family, sent in care of the transplant center. Different centers have different procedures, but general guidelines for the first letter to the donor family are outlined in the fact sheet, Contacting Your Donor Family Exit Disclaimer.

US Department of Health & Human Services