What Are the Lungs?
Your lungs are organs in your chest that allow your body to take in oxygen from the air. They also help remove carbon dioxide (a waste gas/toxic) from your body.
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What Is a Lung Transplant?
A lung transplant is surgery to remove a person's diseased lung and replace it with a healthy lung from a deceased donor.
Lung transplants are done on people who are likely to die from lung disease within 1 to 2 years. Their conditions are so severe that other treatments, such as medicines or breathing devices, no longer work.
Overview
Lung transplants aren't very common due to the small number of donor organs available. Slightly more than 1,400 lung transplants were done in 2007. More donor lungs would mean a larger number of suitable lungs available for transplant.
Lung transplants most often are done in people aged 18 to 65. Sometimes this surgery is done in children and older adults. This article focuses on lung transplants in adults.
Each patient must go through a careful screening process to make sure he or she is a good candidate for a lung transplant. Donor lungs also are carefully screened to make sure they're healthy enough to be used in a transplant.
The Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network manages the nationwide organ-sharing process. OPTN also maintains the waiting lists for all organ donations.
The number of people on the lung transplant waiting list constantly changes. About half of the people on the list receive a lung in any given year.
Some people get one lung during a transplant. This is called a single-lung transplant. Other people get two lungs. This is called a double-lung transplant.
Some people who have severe heart disease and lung disease get a heart and lung(s). This is called a heart-lung transplant.
A rare kind of lung transplant is a living donor lobar lung transplant. In this operation, a healthy adult donates a segment, or lobe, of one lung to another person. This type of transplant usually is done in children.
Outlook
Lung transplants are a "last resort" treatment for people who have severe disease and no other medical options.
A lung transplant can improve a person's quality of life. For people who have certain lung problems, a transplant also may help them live longer than they would without the surgery.
Lung transplants have serious risks. Your body may reject the new lung, or you may develop infections. The short- and long-term complications of a lung transplant can be life threatening.
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Who Needs a Lung Transplant?
Your doctor may recommend a lung transplant if you have severe lung disease that's getting worse. If your condition is so serious that other treatments don't work, lung transplant may be the only option.
Lung transplants most often are used to treat people who have severe:
- - COPD This is the most common reason in adults for needing a lung transplant.
- - Cystic fibrosis. This is the most common reason in children for needing a lung transplant.
- - Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
- - Pulmonary hypertension.
- - Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency.
Applying to a Lung Transplant Program
Lung transplants are done in medical centers where the staff has a lot of organ transplant experience. If you need a lung transplant, you must apply to a center's transplant program.
Transplant teams at the medical center manage all aspects of the center's transplant program. Transplant team members may include a:
- - Thoracic surgeon. This is a doctor who performs lung and chest surgery.
- - Pulmonologist. This is a doctor who specializes in lung diseases and conditions.
- - Cardiologist. This is a doctor who specializes in heart diseases and conditions.
- - Respiratory technician - a person who cares for people who have breathing and lung problems.
- - Transplant coordinator. This is a person who arranges the surgery.
Other team members may include a social worker, psychiatrist, financial coordinator, and other specialists and medical personnel, such as a nutritionist and nurses.
The transplant team will need to find out whether you're a candidate for lung transplant. They will want to make sure you're healthy enough to have the surgery and go through a recovery program afterward.
To do this, they will ask about your medical history. The team will want to know whether you have other serious illnesses or conditions, such as cancer, HIV, or hepatitis. They also will ask whether you've had a major chest surgery before. A previous chest surgery may make it hard to do a lung transplant.
The team also will want to know whether you smoke or use alcohol or drugs.
You also will have tests to determine whether you're healthy enough for a lung transplant. Tests may include:
- Lung function tests. These tests measure the size of your lungs, how much air you can breathe in and out, how fast you can breathe air out, and how well your lungs deliver oxygen to your blood.
- Blood tests. Blood tests help doctors check for certain diseases and conditions. They also help check the function of your organs and show how well treatments are working.
- Chest CT scan. This test creates precise pictures of the structures inside your chest, such as your lungs.
- EKG (electrocardiogram). This test detects and records the heart's electrical activity.
- Echocardiogram. This test uses sound waves to create pictures of your heart.
- Right cardiac catheterization. This test measures blood pressure in the right side of your heart. The results give clues about heart valve disease, heart failure, or lung problems.
You'll talk with team members to make sure you're mentally and emotionally willing to accept the risks of the transplant process and later treatment. The team may ask whether you have a good support network of family and friends.


