<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>robert321</b></i>
well i don't know a whole lot about transplants but i do know that the cases in which patients have been able to go off anti rejection drugs is only in liver transplants, they don't know why it works with livers it just does, but it rarely happens then. drs are trying to figure it out but haven't yet, so well, thats what i know</end quote></div>
This seems to be the ongoing thing. I also had a liver transplant with my lungs and I hardly ever see the liver team.....they really don't follow me that closely at all. They told me about 3 months after TX that they would let the lung docs take over my care because I am on way more anti-rejection stuff than they would put me on. If the liver team sees something funky in my blood work, then they call me, but that's about it. I have had 7 lung biopsies since Tx and only one liver biopsy.