The donor had sustained brain hemorrhage in Dubai in May this year and was operated upon there but to no avail. He was shifted to Indraprastha Apollo hospitals in India where neuro surgeons declared him brain dead at arrival, said Dr Shaleen Agarwal, senior consultant at the department of Liver Transplant Surgery at Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals.
His family consented to donate his organs and doctors split his liver and gave one lobe to a 29-year-old man from Jalandhar who suffered from chronic alcoholic liver failure and had been on the transplant list for five months.
Explaining the uniqueness of the case, Dr Subash Gupta, Chief Liver Surgeon at the hospital said that as the two parts of a liver are not equal, surgeons use the right half for an adult patient and the other half for a small child.
"Cadaveric liver are very rarely split and used for two adults with advanced liver disease as the left lobe is the smaller portion and may not be enough to sustain the person," said Dr Gupta.