A graft of skin or other tissue that is taken from the body of the person to be grafted rather than from another person.
A graft (sometimes bone) taken from a patient and reimplanted in another part of his/her own body
Bone taken from the patient, usually the hip, to be used as graft.
A transplant from one location in an individual to another location in the same individual, usually bone or skin.
Source is from the patientâ€(tm)s own body.
Tissue that is harvested from the patient to replace lost tissue. Back to the Top
Use of your own tissue recovered from another part of your body.
Autologous stem cell transplant.
a tissue or organ that is transplanted to a different part of the same body
A graft taken from one part of the patient's body and transplanted to another part.
tissue that is taken from one site and grafted to another site on the same person; "skin from his thigh replaced the burned skin on his arms"
a graft in which the donor and recipient are the same biologic organism
a procedure for grafting tissue from the patient's own body
a skin graft that uses the patient's own tissues
a tissue grafted into a new position in the body of the same individual
a type of graft Skin grafts may be used in several thicknesses (A)
The use of one of a patient’s valves in another location in the heart. The Ross procedure involves using a patient’s normal pulmonary valve to replace a diseased aortic valve. A homograft conduit is usually placed in the area where the autograft was removed.
a piece of the patient's own tissue transplanted to replace one that's damaged or diseased. Generally, the tissue is taken from the hip. Artificial Disc - a prostheic devise with an elastic nuclus similar to a natural disc.
Tissue taken from one part of a person's body - piece of the hip bone, for example - and transplanted to another place - the spine - on the same person; the patient is both donor and recipient. Jump to Top
A graft of tissue within the same individual from one anatomical location to another
A bone graft taken from the patient and used for fusion in that patient.†Tissue taken from the site of the same patient to repair or replace another site (e.g., bone graft used for fusion).Typically, in spine surgery, the bone is taken from the patient’s iliac crest (part of the pelvis).
see Autologous Stem Cell Infusion
A thin layer of skin taken from an unburned area of the patient's body and placed on the burned area. The layer of skin adheres to and covers the burned area.
Bone transferred from one site to another in the same animal
graft taken from the patient’s own body.
Any tissue transferred from one site to another in the same individual
A transplant using the patient's own cells. Bone marrow is collected, diseased cells removed and healthy cells returned to the patient.
A graft of bone obtained from the patient for transplantation elsewhere on the patient.
(such as an autologous skin graft) - surgical transplantation of any tissue from one part of the body to another location in the same body.
Tissue surgically removed from one area of a person's body, such as the iliac crest in the hip, and transplanted in another site on the same person
tissue taken from one part of an individual organism's body and then moved or transplanted to another location within that same organism. Rejection is rarely (if ever) a problem since the donor and recipient are the same individual. Skin transplants are a common example. Autografts are also used when bone marrow is harvested from an individual and stored for later use. This marrow tissue is transplanted back into the donor to replace tissue destroyed during chemotherapy.
A graft taken from your own body
Tissue taken from one place in the body to be used in another place in the same body.
A transplant from one part to another part of a patient's own body.
A tissue or an organ transplanted into a new position within or on the same individual.
any tissue moved from one part of the body to another, all within the same individual. (bone from the hips is often used in spinal fusion surgeries)
A tissue transplant from one area to another on a single individual.