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Questions posted in the
Heart Forum have been answered by doctors from The Cleveland Clinic Foundation.
Question Title: RejectionForum: The Heart Forum
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Re: RejectionPosted by CCF CARDIO MD-APS on January 19, 1998 at 17:15:20: In Reply to: Rejection posted by Traci on January 07, 1998 at 00:12:20:
: Three months following heart transplant my father experienced a rejection. He Dear Traci, Rejection of a transplanted heart encompasses two forms of rejection, both which lead to failure of the heart. A silent heart attack by definition goes unnoticed for a certain length of time and presumably the heart attack occurred secondary to the rejection that occurred within the coronary arteries of the transplanted heart-a diffuse process that eventually leads to a diffuse occlussion of the arteries or obliteration of blood flow to the cardiac muscle. The other form of rejection involves attacks on the muscle tissue itself causing heart muscle weakness and heart failure- this is why the patient "builds up fluid." In general terms rejection severity predicts graft survival, such that as the rejection worsens the heart transplant fails, a very disappointing outcome but at this point in medicine unavoidable. There is no way to predict which transplant patients will reject more aggressively than others and even which patient's immune systems will respond to immunosuppressive agents such as OKT3. It would be important for you and your father to discuss specifically with the transplant physician what the prognosis is - given the signs and symptoms you described. Information provided in the Heart Forum is intended for general informational purposes only, actual diagnosis and treatment can only be made by your physician(s).
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