A living donor liver transplant (LDLT) involves removing a portion of a healthy person's liver and transplanting it into a patient whose liver has failed. The remarkable ability of the liver to regenerate means both the donor's remaining liver and the recipient's new liver grow back to full size, typically within 6-8 weeks.

Why Living Donor?

In India, deceased donor organ availability is very limited. The waiting list for a deceased donor liver can be years long. Living donor transplant eliminates the wait and allows the transplant to be performed at the optimal time, before the patient deteriorates further.

Dr. Sahota established the living donor liver transplant program in Punjab and has performed over 600 successful transplants.

Who Can Be a Donor?

A living donor must:

The donor evaluation takes 1-2 weeks and is done free of cost to the donor.

The Transplant Surgery

The donor surgery takes 5-7 hours. Typically the right lobe (about 60% of the liver) is removed for an adult recipient. The remaining 40% regenerates in the donor.

The recipient surgery takes 8-12 hours. The diseased liver is removed and the donor liver segment is connected to the recipient's blood vessels and bile duct. Both surgeries happen simultaneously in adjacent operating theatres.

Recovery

Donor recovery:

Recipient recovery:

Outcomes

Dr. Sahota's program has achieved outcomes comparable to leading international centres. Patient survival at 1 year exceeds 90% in elective cases. Donor safety is paramount.