Republican Timofei Moșneaga Hospital Performs Five Urgent Organ Transplants In 48 Hours

WORLD NEWS – MOLDOVA: A surgical team at the Republican Timofei Moșneaga Hospital executed an intense 48-hour run of five complex transplant procedures, completing three kidney and two liver transplantations and stabilizing all recipients. Surgeons coordinated rapid logistics and donor procurement from persons declared in clinical death to enable the operations, and intensive care admissions for the recipients did not exceed seven days as teams worked to restore normal function and reduce long-term treatment burdens.

Among the beneficiaries were two men whose prolonged waits ended with new organs. One patient, diagnosed with liver cirrhosis in 2013 and listed for transplant since 2014, received a liver after multiple calls for surgery over recent months and is now recovering with expected post-surgical discomfort but improving condition. Another recipient, who had endured progressive illness and significant weight loss while waiting, received a transplant after roughly six months on the list and reported marked alleviation of preoperative symptoms within weeks, though general weakness persists as recovery continues.

Surgeons and administrators emphasized that the surge reflects growing public awareness and improved coordination. Transplant coordination was overseen by Adrian Hotineanu for the liver procedures, while the national Transplant Agency, led by director Grigore Romanciuc, cited heightened donor recognition as a key factor in shortening wait times. Officials noted the Republican hospital remains the principal public center providing organ transplantation in the country and expressed plans to expand the number of institutions authorized to conduct donor procurement and transplants to increase donor availability.

Health authorities provided recent activity figures to illustrate progress: four transplants were recorded in 2023 and five in 2024, with prior years showing higher totals of liver and kidney procedures as capacity grew. Medical teams continue to monitor recipients closely, aiming to return them to everyday life with fewer burdens from chronic therapy and to build on the momentum to meet annual transplant needs.


Video originally published on 2026-01-05 14:56:27


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