A donor’s organ will always be the organ of the donor, it doesn’t “adjust” to the new body. A donor’s organ will always have the DNA of the donor, which is why an organ recipient has to take immunosuppressive drugs. A 60 year old’s kidney in a 30 year old’s body is still a 60 year old kidney.
But, organs don’t age in a straight line. A 30 year
old smoker who doesn’t drink might have the lungs of an average 50 year old with the liver of an average 20 year old. So the aging of an organ isn’t due purely to the age of a person, if that makes sense.
Latest Answers