General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: is the six month no drinking rule a law or hospital's judgment call for liver transplants? [View all]REP
(21,691 posts)The most common causes of cirrhosis are alcoholic fatty liver disease (AFLD), Hep C and Hep B. The first two are strongly associated with risk prone behavior by the patient; Hep B is passed by body fluids so risk prone behavior is a factor as well. With donor organs in such short supply, the risks of the surgery (for the patient and living donor), and the immunosuppressant drugs needed post-surgery (not to mention the cost and time of the transplant team) - they want to be sure they'll be working on someone healthy enough to withstand the surgery, who will have a good outcome, and won't lapse into behavior that destroyed their liver function (and don't want to risk someone else's life, in the case of a living donor, who has to also undergo major surgery that's completely unnecessary for their health or well being).