A liver transplant is an operation to remove your liver and replace it with a healthy one from a donor.
It may be recommended if your liver has stopped working properly (liver failure) and other treatments can't help.
What happens
Having a liver transplant involves 3 main stages:
Having an assessment – to find out if you're suitable for a liver transplant, you'll have several tests and will be asked about your health and lifestyle.
Going on the waiting list – if you're suitable for a transplant, you'll need to wait for a healthy donor liver to become available, which could take several months or more.
Having the operation – when a liver is available, you'll go into hospital for surgery to remove your damaged liver and replace it with the healthy donor one.
This can be a long and difficult process, both physically and emotionally.
Life afterwards
Liver transplants are generally very successful and most people are eventually able to return to their normal activities afterwards.
It can take a year or more to fully recover.
After a liver transplant, you'll need to:
take medicines to stop your body attacking the new liver (immunosuppressants) for the rest of your life
have regular check-ups to see how you're doing and check how well your new liver is working
stay as healthy as possible – including eating healthily and exercising regularly
Most people live more than 10 years after a liver transplant and many live for up to 20 years or more.
become a living donor – you have an operation to remove part of your liver and give it to someone who needs a transplant (usually a family member or friend)