scispace - formally typeset
H

Hemant Sharma

Researcher at University of Western Ontario

Publications -  22
Citations -  229

Hemant Sharma is an academic researcher from University of Western Ontario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liver transplantation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 18 publications receiving 134 citations. Previous affiliations of Hemant Sharma include Ochsner Medical Center & London Health Sciences Centre.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Defining Benchmarks in Liver Transplantation: A Multicenter Outcome Analysis Determining Best Achievable Results.

TL;DR: Despite excellent 1- year survival, morbidity in benchmark cases remains high with half of patients developing severe complications during 1-year follow-up, and benchmark cutoffs targeting morbidity parameters offer a valid tool to assess higher risk groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Small-for-size syndrome in liver transplantation: New horizons to cover with a good launchpad.

TL;DR: The histopathology of the engrafted liver in SFSS is characterized by hepatocyte ballooning, steatosis, centrilobular necrosis, and parenchymal cholestasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subnormothermic Oxygenated Perfusion Optimally Preserves Donor Kidneys Ex Vivo

TL;DR: An innovative renal pump circuit system that can perfuse blood or acellular oxygen carrier under flexible temperatures, pressures, and oxygenation is designed and shows that oxygenated perfusion at near-room-temperature provides optimal donor kidney storage conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can we reduce ischemic cholangiopathy rates in donation after cardiac death liver transplantation after 10 years of practice? Canadian single-centre experience

TL;DR: A significant reduction in IC rates and improvement in ICfree survival among DCD liver transplantation recipients after a learning curve period that was marked by more judicious donor selection with shorter procurement times is found.
Journal ArticleDOI

First Canadian experience with robotic laparoendoscopic single-site vs. standard laparoscopic living-donor nephrectomy: A prospective comparative study.

TL;DR: This is the first evidence that R-LESS LDN is safe and associated with comparable surgical and early functional outcomes compared to LLDN, while pain, donor body image, and satisfaction scores were improved compared toLLDN.