Miniaturized percutaneous techniques, flexible ureteroscopy, and outpatient protocols have shortened hospital stays and improved recovery, reshaping quality-of-life outcomes for patients.
"He had a terrible end to his life, a terrible death filled with fear and anxiety and pain. And we feel that this was so preventable." ...
A Palm Beach Synagogue Shabbat service highlighted Renewal, a nonprofit that connects kidney donors with recipients and ...
An overview of Pei Zhong’s work over the past several decades reveals how fundamental engineering research — often done far from the clinic — plays a critical role in shaping safer, more effective ...
On World Kidney Day, Newsweek explores how one country is testing whether early detection can slow a global epidemic.
A racially biased medical test for years kept Black people from getting kidney transplants. A new study shows a national plan ...
For Brie Bauer, that day came when complications from childbirth caused sepsis, costing the Kansas mother of three all four of her limbs. For two years after, Bauer waited for a phone call she feared ...
Shannon’s husband, Kyle, immediately volunteered to begin testing as a potential living donor — not just for her, but for ...
One local practice aims to fill gap in specialized kidney treatment close to home.
A materials science collaboration between UChicago PME engineers and Duke doctors could lead to shorter, safer procedures ...
Dr. Jeffrey Klein, a transplant nephrologist at the University of Kansas Health System, said a working kidney could make prosthetic use possible for the first time.
Miles Lewis had his first seizure at 4 years old. He was diagnosed with epilepsy after those seizures kept happening He was put on medication, but eventually a team of doctors at Johns Hopkins All ...