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Program Overview
The liver transplant program at Rush University Medical Center
in Chicago is a collaborative effort between the Division
of Hepatology and the Division of Abdominal Transplant. The program provides comprehensive transplant services for both adults and
children with end-stage liver disease.
Since its inception in 1985, Rush's liver transplant program has been one of
the most active programs of its kind in the nation. We offer transplantation to
patients with liver failure due to such common causes as autoimmune hepatitis,
hepatitis B, hepatitis C, primary biliary cirrhosis, primary sclerosing cholangitis,
liver cancer, alpha-one anti-trypsin deficiency, hemochromatosis, Budd-Chiari
syndrome and many others. We also offer transplantation to patients considered
too sick or too high risk by other centers. These patients may be older, they
may have advanced malignancy or a thrombosed portal vein, or they may have received
a previous transplant or had multiple previous surgeries. Our team of surgeons
is very experienced in these complex cases, as well as in more routine cases.
Finally, our team of transplant physicians offers living
donor liver transplantation to patients with liver failure who are deteriorating
rapidly or who have cancer. Our results, even with patients considered too high risk
by other centers, are well above the national averages.
To find out if you are eligible for a liver transplant, please contact us at
the number below. An in-depth reference
section for referring physicians is also available on this site.
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