Organ nearly 45cm-long was cut from 56-year-old suffering from autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease

This article is more than 9 months old

This article is more than 9 months old

Indian surgeons have cut a kidney weighing the same as a bowling ball out of a man with a life-threatening genetic condition, a surgeon has said.

The 7.4kg kidney is one of the biggest ever removed in an operation.

“It was a huge lump that was occupying half of his abdomen. We knew it was a big kidney but never thought it would be this heavy,” said Sachin Kathuria, a member of the surgical team.

The 56-year-old patient, suffering from autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, underwent the two-hour operation at the Sir Ganga Ram hospital in Delhi last month.

A normal kidney weighs about 120-150g and is 12cm long.

Kathuria said the kidney cut out from the man was nearly 45cm long.

The Guinness Book of Records says the largest kidney removed from a human was 4.25kg in an operation in Dubai in 2017.

Doctors at the New Delhi hospital said, however, that they had found medical accounts of a kidney weighing 9kg being cut from a patient.

The disease the unnamed man was suffering from causes fluid-filled cysts to start growing in the kidneys. Doctors decided to operate when they detected internal bleeding and the spread of infections.

Kathuria said the man was now in good condition and on dialysis awaiting a kidney transplant.