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Domino donors (39 +/- 12.5 years) had significantly higher mean right ventricular end-diastolic diameter and lower left ventricular diameter than normal mean values. Domino recipients had significantly higher mean pulmonary arteriolar resistances than controls; mean ischemic time was also significantly lower in group 1 than in group 2. Short- and mid-term controls after surgery in group 1 showed persistently higher systemic vascular resistances and pulmonary vascular resistances and lower cardiac output than in group 1. Two patients developed an early and unexpected increase in pulmonary wedge pressure accompanied by severe paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea and mitral regurgitation. In all cases, the left ventricles were relatively inadequate; the combination of low cardiac output and of high systemic vascular resistances favoured the occurrence of an afterload mismatch condition that was worsened by chronic hypoxia. This condition must be known and expected in these patients after transplantation in order to provide timely and effective treatment to potentially life-threatening left ventricular failure episodes. IN CONCLUSION, the subset of transplanted patients that receives domino donors may develop left-side afterload mismatch which, combined with low cardiac output, with high systemic vascular resistances and with the effects of chronic hypoxia originally suffered by the heart, may cause sudden and unexpected left-side heart failure which has to be timely recognised and managed. Although hemodynamic adaptation of this patients is highly problematic, it does not limit the value of the domino procedure.