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List of Government owned Kidney transplant centres in Nigeria including cost –

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There is no need travelling to India, Dubai, the UK and the USA for kidney transplant anymore as there are now government owned kidney transplant centres spread across Nigeria with competent manpower and up-to-date facilities. Morever, why travel abroad when you can get a renal transplant done here at a cheaper rate with good outcome plus support from family and friends?

Below are are list of government own kidney transplant centres in Nigeria:

1. LAGOS STATE UNIVERSITY TEACHING HOSPITAL (LASUTH)

Had performed a total of 8 kidney transplant so far. Had a second successful transplant on a 41-year-old policeman in 2016. The donor was his 42 year old brother. Both the recipient and the donor survived the surgery.

Lagos remains the only state in Nigeria with a functional and active renal transplant centre or facilities. The state tertiary hospital, LASUTH carries out kidney transplant surgeries year in year out. The last renal transplant successfully performed by LASUTH was in 2020 on a 47 year old patient.

Cost: Announcing the surgery to newsmen, chief Medical Director of the hospital said the kidney transplant cost 4.5 million Naira.

2. Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia

Reputed to have performed the first kidney transplant in South-Eastern Nigeria.

The first patient to receive a new kidney was a 37-year-old businessman, Mr. Oji Ogbonanya Ule, who had been battling with kidney problem for four years. His new kidney was donated by his 58-year-old uncle who is a civil servant. They reportedly paid #5.5 million Naira for this procedure.

FMC Umuahia successfully performed their 11th renal transplant in March 2023.

3. Lagos University Teaching Hospital

In 2011, a thirty eight-year-old woman was the recipient of the first successful kidney transplantation surgery at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital. Since then, they have carried out series of successful renal transplant. Cost of renal transplant in LUTH is #8 million Naira.

4. University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital

Nigeria’s first kidney transplant was conducted on 31-year-old Suleiman Usman in Sept. 2010 by the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), in collaboration with the Bayero University Teaching Hospital, Kano and the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife.

The kidney was donated by his brother, Abubakar Usman at the university Kidney Centre.

Cost: #5 million.

5. Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital

Has performed the highest number of kidney transplants in Nigeria. The OAUTH, Ile-Ife, was the first teaching hospital in Nigeria to carry out an indigenous kidney transplant in June, 2002. According to the Chief Medical Director, the hospital has performed a total of 15 kidney transplants and over 70 open heart surgeries with no complications. They recently acquired modern facilities to enhance patient care. With 6.5 million Naira, you can have a successful renal transplant in OAUTH.

6. Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital

The most successful of the government owned kidney transplant centres in Nigeria with 100 recorded successful transplants (and counting) since their commencement of operation in 2002. Cost of renal transplant Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital is ₦6.5 million including drugs.

7. Delta University Teaching Hospital (DELSUTH)

It was reported on Premium Times that DELSUTH performed their first successful kidney transplant in 2014. However, they have not been consistent with the renal transplant programme as there have been an interlude of 7 years now. Anyway, dialysis in this centre is highly subsidized by the state government for indigenes. DELSUTH conducted their first renal transplant for #6 million Naira.

8. University College Hospital, Ibadan

University College Hospital is one of the oldest kidney transplant centres in Nigeria. Had their first successful renal transplant in 2008 and have been consistent ever since averaging about 5 transplants every year. Cost of renal transplant in UCH is #7.5 million Naira plus drugs.

9. University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, Enugu

Located in Otuku-Ozzalla, Enugu. The University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH) performed their first successful kidney transplant in 2018 and has been consistent ever since. The cost of renal transplant in UNTH is #3.5 million Naira including 6 months immunosuppressive drugs.

10. Uthman Danfodio University Teaching Hospital, Sokoto

Performed their first successful kidney transplant in February 2025.

We need more kidney transplant centres in Nigeria to cater for the health of teeming Nigerians with kidney diseases.

Please leave a comment.

Sources:

Thisday

PM news

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NSRS 87th Conference: The future of Nigeria’s surgical workforce

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NSRS CONCLUDES 87TH SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE IN BENIN, SETS STRATEGIC AGENDA FOR NIGERIA’S SURGICAL WORKFORCE

Benin City, Nigeria — July 2026: The Nigerian Surgical Research Society (NSRS) has successfully concluded its 87th Annual General Meeting and Scientific Conference in Benin City, Edo State, bringing together leading surgeons, researchers, educators, policymakers, and trainees from across the country and beyond.

The conference, hosted at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), focused on one of the most pressing issues in Nigeria’s healthcare sector: the future of the nation’s surgical workforce.

This year’s theme, “Surgical Workforce 2030: Training, Retaining and Task-Sharing in the Nigerian Context,”guided two days of intensive deliberations, scientific presentations, and policy-driven discussions. According to the Chairman of the Local Organizing Committee, Professor Stanley Ukadike Okugbo, the theme “strikes at the very heart of the structural headwinds confronting healthcare delivery in Nigeria today,” highlighting the challenges of brain drain, uneven workforce distribution, and evolving surgical needs.

NSRS
Secretary General of Edo MMA, Dr Iluobe Inegbenosun, at the event

In his presidential address, Prof. Afeyodion Akhator, President of NSRS, emphasized the urgency of strengthening surgical training programs, improving retention strategies, and adopting safe, evidence-based task-sharing models. He noted that the outcomes of the conference “will influence the direction of surgical education, workforce planning, healthcare policy, and patient care for years to come.”

A major highlight of the event was the keynote lecture delivered by Professor Peter Ndidi Ebeigbe, immediate past President of the National Postgraduate Medical College of Nigeria and Consultant to the World Health
Organization. His address provided a comprehensive roadmap for building a resilient and future-ready surgical workforce, drawing on global best practices and Nigeria’s unique healthcare realities.

The conference featured multiple scientific sessions, exhibitions, debates, and a pre-conference workshop. Delegates presented high-quality abstracts spanning trauma care, oncology, gastrointestinal surgery, surgical

education, and innovations in clinical practice. Participants were also encouraged to experience the cultural richness of Benin City, described in the brochure as “one of Africa’s most historic urban centres and the cradle of the ancient Benin Kingdom.”

The 87th AGM also marked a significant leadership transition for the Society. Members elected a new executive committee to steer NSRS into its next phase of growth, including preparations for the Society’s landmark 50th anniversary in December.

NSRS
Present and Past NSRS Excos

New Executive Committee of the Nigerian Surgical Research Society (NSRS)
• Dr. George C. Obonna — President
• Dr. Clement Odion — Secretary
• Dr. Lucky Ehiagwina — Assistant Secretary
• Dr. Raymond Eghonghon — Treasurer
• Dr. Omorodion Irowa — Auditor
• Prof. Emmanuel Akpo — Editor
• Dr. Francis Campbell — Assistant Editor
• Prof. Aifeyodion Akhator — Ex Officio I
• Prof. Stanley Okugbo — Ex Officio II

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Why you feel dizzy when you stand up

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Why you feel dizzy when you stand up?

A young, healthy patient asked me: “Doc, sometimes when I stand up from the bed too fast, my vision goes completely black for two seconds and I get dizzy. Am I having a mini-stroke?”

No, it is actually proof that your nervous system is working perfectly.

The exact neurovascular cascade behind why your vision blacks out when you stand up too fast and why you don’t actually pass out. 👇

• The Gravity Drop: When you are lying down, your heart pumps blood easily on a flat plane. The moment you stand up abruptly, gravity instantly pulls about 500 to 800 mL of your blood straight down into your legs.

Why you feel dizzy when you stand up
Why you feel dizzy when you stand up. Credit: Nurse Miriam

• The Transient Drain: This sudden pooling means less blood returns to your heart, which temporarily means less blood is pumped up to your head. For a split second, your brain experiences a drop in pressure.

• The Visual Blackout: The retina (the back of your eye) is incredibly sensitive to oxygen and pressure changes. When the blood pressure dips, the retina temporarily shuts down to conserve energy which is exactly why your vision goes black or static.

• The Baroreceptor Rescue: Luckily, you have pressure sensors (baroreceptors) in your neck. Within milliseconds, they detect the blood pressure drop and fire a panic signal to your brainstem.

• The Sympathetic Snap: Your autonomic nervous system instantly kicks in. It violently constricts the blood vessels in your legs and spikes your heart rate, physically squeezing the blood right back up to your brain. Vision restored.

Summary:

First time this happened to me I genuinely thought I was dying.
Turns out my body was just buffering.
Knowing the science changes everything

Here’s what’s actually happening:

When you stand up quickly, gravity pulls blood downward. Your body briefly has less blood reaching the brain. Your nervous system — specifically the baroreceptors –detects this drop and rapidly triggers your heart to beat faster and your blood vessels to constrict, restoring blood flow within seconds.
The momentary blackout and dizziness is just that brief gap before the correction kicks in.

👉Hi, I am Dr. Priyam. I break down complex medical science and advocate for Evidence-Based Medicine. FOLLOW ME for more clinical facts.

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Two A+ Parents, One O- Baby? The Blood Type “Scandal” That’s Actually Just Science

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can a+ and a+ give birth to o+ or O negative?

It’s a panic that lands in clinics and WhatsApp groups far too often: “Both of us are A positive… how is our child O negative? Did the lab mess up? Or is something else going on?”

The short, reassuring answer is no lab error, no mystery, and no betrayal. This outcome is completely possible under normal genetics. Here’s why the “math” actually maths perfectly once we look at what blood-type tests really reveal.

Your blood type is decided by two separate systems that most people only see the final phenotype of, not the hidden genes.
ABO system 🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸

can a+ and a+ give birth to o+
can a+ and a+ give birth to o+ or O negative?

Type A means you carry at least one A allele. You could be AA or AO. The O allele is recessive and invisible in your test result. If both you and your partner are AO (very common), each of you has a 50 % chance of passing the O allele. When both pass O, the child is blood group O. Roughly 45–50 % of people with type A are actually AO carriers, so this pairing happens every day.

Rh (positive/negative) system 🩸🩸🩸
“Positive” means you have the dominant D antigen. You can still be heterozygous Dd and carry the recessive d allele. If both parents are Dd, there is a 25 % chance the child inherits d from both and is Rh negative. About 15 % of people are Rh negative, which means a large portion of “positive” people quietly carry the d gene.

When both parents are A positive but heterozygous for both traits (AO and Dd), an O-negative child is not only possible — it is mathematically expected in a predictable percentage of pregnancies. The child simply received the two recessive alleles that were hiding in plain sight in both parents.
Blood-group reports show only what antigens are expressed on red cells. They do not sequence your DNA or tell you whether you are homozygous or heterozygous. That hidden information is what allows “impossible” combinations to appear regularly in perfectly ordinary families.

This is basic Mendelian inheritance, not infidelity or laboratory failure. The same recessive-gene logic explains blue-eyed children born to brown-eyed parents or curly-haired kids from straight-haired couples. It is science doing exactly what it is supposed to do.

If the result still feels unsettling, a simple conversation with your doctor or a genetics counsellor can walk you through your specific probabilities. In the overwhelming majority of cases, however, the only thing that needs updating is the outdated assumption that blood types behave like simple labels instead of the elegant, recessive-carrying system they actually are.

Your O-negative child is not evidence of a mistake. They are proof that genetics loves surprises — and that love (and science) are doing just fine.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Dr Parveen Yograj

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