Archive for the ‘SEEKING KIDNEY DONOR’ Category

Woman offers kidney to save stranger’s life

Monday, April 26th, 2010

NZPA April 17, 2010, 8:52 am

A Taranaki woman has offered to save a complete stranger’s life by giving her one of her kidneys.

Hillary Kieft, 38, and Celese Mottram, 33, met by chance on a New Plymouth street in May last year, The Taranaki Daily News reported.

Mrs Mottram was on dialysis after contracting a disease that destroyed her kidneys after the birth of her daughter Maddison in March 2006.

The mother of four gave up hope after doctors told her that she would need a transplant.

Mrs Mottram said she thought it was a joke when Mrs Kieft, a born-again Christian, suggested she might be a donor.

Mrs Kieft then contacted Mrs Mottram six weeks later to offer her a kidney.

She said their meeting was “a divine appointment”.

“I live by faith, my love is Jesus Christ and he overcomes a lot.”

Mrs Mottram said it was an incredible thing for a stranger to do.

However, the transplant process did not move fast enough and Mrs Mottram had to have her left foot and ankle amputated six weeks ago because of complications with her dialysis.
The pair still have not been told by the transplant team if they were a match.

Woman appeals for kidney donor

Monday, April 26th, 2010

HEALTH: Incentives available to anyone willing
Posted By HAROLD CARMICHAEL THE SUDBURY STAR
Posted 10 days ago

Andrea Shea Hudson has lived with Type 1 diabetes since the age of four.

Now, at age 45, her kidneys have shut down, she is on an insulin pump and has started dialysis treatments.

What would give the Lively woman back her life is a kidney transplant. She can’t wait for a cadaver transplant, which could take up to five years, since there’s 21,000-person waiting list in Canada.

Instead, she needs one from a live donor that could be transplanted and functioning in rapid fashion.

“My kidneys don’t work any more,” she said Thursday, at a press conference at Tom Davies Square, where she launched a public drive to find a live donor.

“I feel like a Christmas turkey. I have two litres of (extra) fluid in me. (But) my kidneys, in fact, lasted quite a long time.”

A life strategy coach by profession, Shea Hudson is hoping to be matched with a person under the age of 60 of any blood type. That’s because she has AB-blood and, consequently, is a universal recipient for an organ donation.

Shea Hudson has the backing of a local group that formed to get the word out about her donor kidney search and to raise $25,000 for the costs associated with the operation.

The group’s website is www.lifesavingdonation.com.

What makes the public appeal unique is that incentives are being offered for the living donor’s family and the person’s employer as a means to both thank and support them following the transplant.

As the kidney donor would likely be off work one month, the group is looking to help the donor’s family through a number of measures, such as movie passes and meals out, while helping the donor’s employer through things such as employee training and marketing help.

“We are here today to let people know we need to find that one person who says ‘I want to donate a kidney,’ ” said friend Dawn Larsen, who is helping to spearhead the group.

“We will not stop looking until we find someone.”

Ward 7 Coun. Russ Thompson, who received a cadaver kidney in 1994 after undergoing three years of dialysis, said the transplant gave him his life back.

“I kind of felt I lost three, four years of my life because of it,” he said at the press conference.

“It was a tough thing to endure. The transplant, it was the ultimate gift. It returns you to a normal lifestyle again. Your quality of life is back. You feel more productive.”

National Organ and Tissue Donation Awareness Week is April 18-25.

hcarmichael@thesudburystar.com

Man donates kidney to Lafayette woman

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Man donates kidney to Lafayette woman

Updated: Monday, 26 Apr 2010, 11:01 AM EDT
Published : Sunday, 25 Apr 2010, 5:01 PM EDT

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI) – April is the national Donate Life Month. One Lafayette woman’s life was changed after someone she never even met donated his kidney to her.

Two strangers, one kidney, one saved life: that’s the story of Adam Bridge and Sandy Watts. It all started when 24-year-old Flora resident Adam Bridge stopped at a gas station in Rossville and saw a sign saying Watts was looking for a kidney donor with an O-positive blood type.

“They say the O-positive blood type is rare,” said Watts.

“I called and inquired, you know, and I thought about it for a day or so, and kind of walked into that position. If I were tied to a machine like that I would want somebody to step up for me,” said Bridge.

So, Bridge stepped up for someone who had been a perfect stranger to him.

“I’ll give somebody my kidney, I’ll give somebody that better quality of life,” said Bridge.

Watts said her health problems began long ago and have continued to get worse over the years.

“I delivered my daughter in 1981 and I got toxemia when I delivered her and my kidneys shut down then and I’ve been sick ever since,” said Watts.

Her last hope to feel better was to find a kidney donor.

“I was sick and tired of being sick and tired all the time. I have a 5-year-old grandbaby and you know he likes to play basketball and I couldn’t do it. And, he said, ‘Granny, Jesus isn’t going to let you die, he’s going to give you a kidney,’” said Watts.

In February, Bridge and Watts waited in separate hospital rooms and both underwent successful surgeries.

“The surgery, from what I was told, was about two hours. I have maybe four very small incisions,” said Bridge.

That’s a small price to pay for saving a life Bridge said.

“He’s my hero, and I love him dearly,” said Watts.

Now the two strangers will be connected in some way for life.

“He’s like the son I never had. We’re very close. His family is my family now,” said Watts.

Both Watts and Bridge hope others can donate as well.

“Put yourself in that position of someone on dialysis and think about their quality of life that they have and then think if you want to do it. If your heart’s in the right spot do it,” said Bridge.

“There’s people out there dying and you can save their life and that’s got to be a wonderful thing. Adam said I’m so glad I can do this for you. And, I say I am so glad you did this for me,” said Watts.

Number of new organ donors doesn’t keep pace with need

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Green Bay Press Gazzette

February 14, 2010

In the summer of 2008, Tanya Conrad sent an e-mail to about 50 relatives and close friends, asking if anyone could do her a favor: give up a kidney.

“It is very hard for me to ask you guys this,” she wrote. “But I am in need of help.”

Nearly two years later, Conrad, 36, of Abrams, has joined 1,500 other Wisconsin residents on a transplant waiting list that organ donation advocates wish did not even exist.

About 46,000 people in the state die every year, providing more than enough kidneys, hearts, livers and other organs for everyone who needs a transplant. However, not enough are donors to fulfill the need.

For Conrad, who was diagnosed with kidney disease 10 years ago, that means a life of agonizing uncertainty, with no assurance that a donor will be found before her health deteriorates even further.

“There’s nothing I can do about it,” she said. “That’s what is frustrating about it. I can’t do anything to help myself.”

To promote organ donation, a number of health organizations and others have designated today as National Donor Day — an occasion for people to consider organ, tissue or blood donation.

In Wisconsin, proponents hope to see a significant increase in donations starting in April, when Wisconsin launches a new online organ donation registry.

Rather than waiting to declare themselves organ donors when their driver’s licenses come up for renewal, people will be able to register online. Wisconsin is one of the last states in the country to provide such an online service.

Trey Schwab, outreach coordinator for the University of Wisconsin Hospital Organ Procurement Organization, said he hopes the registry will boost donations statewide from the current 54 percent of all residents aged 16 or older to more than 70 percent — the level in Oklahoma and other leading states.

Anthony Atala on growing new organs

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

See webinar link below:

copy and paste to your browser -
http://www.ted.com/talks/anthony_atala_growing_organs_engineering_tissue.html

Very interesting!!!

Study highlights need for more kidney donations

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Surgeons operate to extract the liver and kidneys from a woman at the Unfallkrankenhaus Berlin hospital in Berlin, Germany.

LONDON (Reuters) – Kidney transplants from living donors have surged worldwide over the past decade, researchers said Wednesday, adding more organs are still needed from people who have just died.

They estimated 27,000 transplants take place every year from living donors — representing 39 percent of all kidney transplants — with majority in the United States, Brazil, Iran, Mexico and Japan.

“Our study shows that living donor kidney transplant rates have steadily risen in most regions of the world increasing its global significance as a treatment option for kidney failure,” the researchers wrote in Nature’s journal, Kidney International.

Better understanding of these global rates is important as severe kidney disease requiring transplants rises worldwide due to aging populations and unhealthy diets leading to diabetes and other conditions, they said.

Researcher Lucy Horvat and her colleagues at the University of Western Ontario in Canada said understanding who donates and why in different countries can help officials find ways to increase kidney and other organ donations.

“This is the first comprehensive report of its kind and it emphasizes the growing significance of living kidney donation worldwide,” Horvat said in a telephone interview.

A kidney transplant can get a person off dialysis and back to a normal life but the shortage of deceased donors pushes more people to seek an organ donation from a friend or relative, Horvat said.

Her team analyzed data from health registries, transplant networks, published studies and national health ministries in 69 countries.

They estimated the number of living kidney donor transplants grew over the last decade, with more than half of the countries reporting at least a 50 percent increase.

The researchers said Saudi Arabia ranked highest in the world for its living kidney donation rates, with most donors unrelated to the recipients.

Iran came in third and has no waiting list, likely due to a controversial system under which patients can pay for donated kidneys.

The researchers only reported legal living donations and said the overall number is likely higher.

The World Health Organization estimates about 10 percent of all organ transplants worldwide involve unacceptable or illegal transplants.

Life-saving kidney is gift from stranger

Monday, February 8th, 2010

By Carrie Whitaker • cwhitaker@enquirer.com • February 8, 2010
Last year Annie Laib was in a lot of pain. The 33-year-old doctor’s kidneys were failing and no one in her extended family, not even one of her 25 cousins, was a match for a transplant.

Annie’s twin sister, Emily, received a kidney from their cousin – the girl’s only healthy familial match – a year before and was doing well. Doctors told their family there was a 50/50 chance the kidney would last for 20 years.

The women have polycystic kidney disease, a genetic condition. Their father, grandmother and uncle have it as well but their cases are far milder than the twins’.

“Here’s poor Annie, facing a few years of dialysis and possibly her kidneys wouldn’t do so well,” said University Hospital transplant surgeon Dr. Steven Woodle.

Annie, of Newport, worried she wouldn’t get the same lease on life. But she hadn’t yet met Amy Maliborski.

Sitting in University Hospital on Friday with a new, healthy kidney inside of her, Annie Laib wept, letting loose the fear and anticipation she’d held onto for so long.

Then, happy tears, as she met her donor, a 36-year-old mother of three who heard about Annie’s plea and in a split second thought, “I could do that.”

“It’s a miracle,” said Annie’s dad, Richard, standing over the two, Annie at the edge of her hospital bed and Amy next to her in a wheelchair, grasping hands.

“Your kidney is so energetic,” Annie told Amy. “I haven’t felt this good in years.”
Amy’s story

Amy Maliborski was out of town when the plea for a donor was printed in the church bulletin at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Westwood, the neighborhood where she lives.

She happened to think to read it online.

Coming across Annie’s name, Amy learned that this stranger was in the end stages of renal disease and needed a kidney. People with type O blood can wait four years to find a match, Woodle said.

Amy decided to call.

“I was just really at peace with it,” she said. “I thought, when else in your life do you have the opportunity to make such a big difference?”

She shared the idea with her husband, Craig, who admittedly wasn’t as gung-ho. But the assistant principal at St. Xavier High School couldn’t say no to his wife’s brave spirit.

Amy’s mother, Mary Lou Blount, was supportive and also bit her tongue.

“I was very concerned for her,” Blount said. “I knew she had to go through all this fear and courage at the same time, which I think is a very difficult thing to do.”

Amy was tested and found that she was a perfect match for Annie.

“I wasn’t afraid of the pain. I wasn’t afraid of dying,” Amy said. “But it was hard knowing if something went wrong, it was my choice.”

On Thursday she went in for surgery, refusing some medications so she could “see Craig’s face until the very last second.”

“They wheeled me back and they said, can you just hop up onto the operating table, so I did.”
Living donors

Although Woodle believes modern medicine has improved survival rates for today’s transplant donors, the reported risk of death is one in 5,000.

University Hospital prefers living donors transplants because the kidney can lasts an average of 20 years, compared to a deceased donor’s kidney, which on average lasts 10 to 11 years, Woodle said.

Forty-five percent of all kidney transplants in the United States today involve living donors. University Hospital has edged up its percentage to 64 percent, Woodle said.

“It adds years of life expectancy,” Woodle said. “That kidney will get (Annie) into middle age of life with one transplant.”

A subsequent transplant can be more difficult, making the first transplant critical, Woodle said.

According to the national Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, from July 2006 until January 2009 University Hospital completed 82 living donor transplants with a 100 percent survival rate after a year, 7 percentage points higher than the national average.
Going home

On the day after their surgeries, Amy Maliborski decided she wanted to meet the woman who received her organ. Annie Laib had hoped this would be the case.

The women’s mothers recognized each other. Kathleen Laib and Blount had worked together in years past as Realtors at Coldwell Banker on the West Side.

“Did you know it was us?” Kathleen Laib asked. Blount nodded her head “yes.”

Amy Maliborski was home on Saturday, about 48 hours after surgery. She’ll require a checkup in a week and should see her doctor once a year to check her kidney function and blood pressure, Woodle said. Living with one kidney gives her no better chance of kidney failure, because the things that cause kidney failure would affect both kidneys, Woodle said.

Annie will take a little more recovery time in the hospital, where they will monitor how her body receives its new organ.

The transplant means the girls are technically no longer living with polycystic kidney disease.

“It’s gone,” Annie said with a smile. “It’s too wonderful for words. She saved my life.”

Study highlights need for more kidney donations

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

LONDON (Reuters) – Kidney transplants from living donors have surged worldwide over the past decade, researchers said Wednesday, adding more organs are still needed from people who have just died.

They estimated 27,000 transplants take place every year from living donors — representing 39 percent of all kidney transplants — with majority in the United States, Brazil, Iran, Mexico and Japan.

“Our study shows that living donor kidney transplant rates have steadily risen in most regions of the world increasing its global significance as a treatment option for kidney failure,” the researchers wrote in Nature’s journal, Kidney International.

Better understanding of these global rates is important as severe kidney disease requiring transplants rises worldwide due to aging populations and unhealthy diets leading to diabetes and other conditions, they said.

Researcher Lucy Horvat and her colleagues at the University of Western Ontario in Canada said understanding who donates and why in different countries can help officials find ways to increase kidney and other organ donations.

“This is the first comprehensive report of its kind and it emphasizes the growing significance of living kidney donation worldwide,” Horvat said in a telephone interview.

A kidney transplant can get a person off dialysis and back to a normal life but the shortage of deceased donors pushes more people to seek an organ donation from a friend or relative, Horvat said.

Her team analyzed data from health registries, transplant networks, published studies and national health ministries in 69 countries.

They estimated the number of living kidney donor transplants grew over the last decade, with more than half of the countries reporting at least a 50 percent increase.

The researchers said Saudi Arabia ranked highest in the world for its living kidney donation rates, with most donors unrelated to the recipients.

Iran came in third and has no waiting list, likely due to a controversial system under which patients can pay for donated kidneys.

The researchers only reported legal living donations and said the overall number is likely higher.

The World Health Organization estimates about 10 percent of all organ transplants worldwide involve unacceptable or illegal transplants.

(Reporting by Michael Kahn; Editing by Maggie Fox and Sophie Hares)

Air Station Marine donates kidney to save SC teen

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

http://www.islandpacket.com/news/local/story/1031870.html

By NOELLE PHILLIPS

Maybe it was Cpl. Ryan Fackey’s natural inclination to give away almost anything.

Maybe it was his service as a U.S. Marine in Iraq, where he saw countless children who had lived much harder lives than his.

Or perhaps his decision to give away a kidney simply was the answer to a chorus of prayers flowing from Columbia.

“I thought I was making a difference in Iraq,” said Fackey, 21, an FA-18 fighter jet mechanic at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort.”I’m making a difference now. I like making life-changing decisions.”

No matter what drove Fackey, his decision to donate one of his kidneys to a stranger extended the life of 15-year-old Dani Jones of Columbia.

And the two had never met until Tuesday at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. The operation was scheduled for Wednesday, Veterans Day.

Jones needed a kidney after a lifetime of taking steroids and other drugs had worn out her own. Those medications were needed to treat the aftereffects of myelofibrosis, a rare disease that disrupts the body’s ability to develop red blood cells.

Jones underwent a lifesaving bone-marrow transplant at the age of 3 and has been dealing with side effects ever since.

The latest complication came in April, when doctors diagnosed kidney failure. After months of tests to make sure Dani would be a good candidate, she was placed on a transplant list Nov. 2.

Four days later, Jones’ family got a phone call from MUSC saying she was a match with an anonymous living donor.

“He’s an answer to prayers,” said Hattie Wilson, Dani’s grandmother.

Donors like Fackey are rare in South Carolina, said Lucia Miles, MUSC’s transplant coordinator for living donors. They are called “Good Samaritan” donors because they are giving to a person they have no previous relationship with.

In 2008, 171 people received new kidneys at MUSC, the state’s only transplant center. Of those, 36 were from living donors. And only one of those donors was a “Good Samaritan,” Miles said.

Fackey is from Hamilton, Ohio. In March 2008, he volunteered to leave his job on the flight line to spend seven months in Iraq.

A fourth-generation Marine, Fackey wanted a taste of combat.

While he “didn’t see much action” in Iraq, Fackey spent a lot of time around the Iraqi people. While patrolling the streets, he would see dozens of children begging for candy and attention from the Marines.

Sometimes, they would show scars. Some had missing limbs. He doesn’t know if those wounds were caused by the U.S. military or someone else.

He will say little else about that experience.

“After I got back, I started looking for other ways to give,” Fackey said.

Fackey isn’t sure what made him look into organ donation but he said he is a fan of medical dramas and loves to roam Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia, reading about different subjects.

He called his parents to let them know about his decision. And he researched Marine Corps regulations to make sure he would be allowed to do it. Then he called MUSC and asked to be put on its anonymous living donor list.

Fackey’s parents were uneasy with their son’s decision.

“I said, ‘Ryan, I don’t know about this,’” said his mother, Brenda Fackey, who flew in from Ohio for the surgery. “He said, ‘I can give one away and save someone’s life. And I only need one to live.’”

Brenda Fackey said she wasn’t surprised by her son’s decision because he always has been a generous soul.

Just this year, she mentioned during a phone call that her washing machine had broken. Ryan Fackey volunteered to buy her a new one.

“I said, ‘Ryan, I can buy my own washer. And the next thing I know there’s a knock on the door and Lowe’s is delivering a new washing machine.”

Ryan Fackey specified that the recipient of his kidney should be someone between 8 and 18. Otherwise, he didn’t want to know anything about them.

Then Dani Jones and her family said they wanted to meet the donor.

Fackey agreed.

The list of medical problems Dani has dealt with over the years is extensive: kidney failure, two leg surgeries, diabetes, cataract surgery, growth deficiency and seizures. Doctors expect the transplant to give her a normal life expectancy and to cure her diabetes, said her mother, Paula Wilson.

She said she couldn’t believe Dani and Fackey were a perfect match. “It’s amazing,” Wilson said.

Dani, a Dreher High School sophomore, plans to go to college and maybe open her own nail salon.

Over the years, Dani has been the source of strength for her family. Her parents – Paula Wilson and Mark Jones – are quick to describe how tough she has been while enduring so much.

Dani’s mother has 12 siblings. At the hospital, an ever-present company of aunts, uncles and cousins is nearly impossible for a newcomer to keep up with.

On the morning of her surgery, Dani sent a text message to her aunts and uncles. “I am about to go to MUSC to have my kidney transplant. I just wanted to say I love you and don’t let it bother you. … Pray to Him and enjoy your day. Love, Your Strong Blessed Angel.”

Dani took an instant liking to Ryan Fackey and his mother. She searched for him on the Web sites Facebook and MySpace. She sent text messages to her friends about the cute Marine who was giving her a kidney.

“When they told me how old he was I was like, ‘For real?’”At least I’m getting a fresh, healthy kidney. I don’t have to worry about no disease when I get out. I get a strong Marine.”

The night before the surgery, Dani wanted a last meal of hot wings. She invited the Fackeys to join her family.

Ryan Fackey is a gregarious man. Almost everyone he meets becomes an instant friend. He is quick with a joke and he high-fives those who laugh with him.

At supper, he was teasingly snapping photos of his mother wearing glasses to read the menu when Dani had a seizure.

During the seizures, Dani gets fidgety and her eyes are unfocused. She falls asleep for a few minutes when they are over.

Fackey grew silent and serious. He turned his head and wiped his eyes. When Dani awoke, he whispered, “That makes me want to do this even more. I’m glad I’m giving my kidney to you.”

On Wednesday, instead of lining up at one of several restaurants offering free meals to the military in honor of Veterans Day, Ryan Fackey arrived at MUSC before dawn.

Dani and her family arrived a few minutes later to check in.

Fackey’s surgery was first.

As he lay in a hospital bed waiting to be wheeled into the operating room, Dani paid a quick visit.

She hugged Fackey and said, “I really do appreciate this.”

After Fackey was taken to surgery shortly after 8 a.m., Dani went to prepare for her own. Brenda Fackey waited in the pre-operating area with Dani, Dani’s mother and her aunt, Belinda Edwards of Columbia.

Brenda Fackey helped spread blankets over Dani as Wilson answered questions from doctors about her daughter’s medical history.

By 10:30 a.m., Dani was in an operating room next door, and doctors started cutting open the place where her new kidney would go.

Fackey’s mother, meanwhile, joined Dani’s parents, grandmothers and a half-dozen aunts and uncles in the waiting room. The two families bonded by telling stories about their lives and their children.

By the end of the day, Brenda Fackey said Dani had gained not only a kidney but another mother.

Combined, the two surgeries lasted about six hours. Both patients made it through without complications.

The first thing Dani said after waking from anesthesia was, “Where’s Ryan?” her mother said.

Likewise, Ryan asked his mother about Dani. He already told Dani he would be watching out for her for the rest of their lives.

“You’re under the Ryan Protection Act,” he joked. “I know where Columbia is.”

Kidney Transplant A Success Among Cyber Friends

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Bill Hudson

Inside Chris Strouth’s room at the University of Minnesota Medical Center, a “Hello Kidney” cake lightens the mood. For the past year, Strouth has been living with a dire medical situation: failing kidneys.

On Tuesday, surgeons at the university transplanted a living donor kidney in Strouth. It’s quite a contrast when you consider the life he’s been living.

“I can’t even comprehend it,” Strouth explained from his hospital bed.

Since last April, the 41-year old music and video producer had been making three trips each week to a dialysis center in Minneapolis. For three hours each visit, intravenous tubes dangled from his arms as the filtering machine pumped his blood to remove impurities that his kidneys couldn’t.

Strouth, smiling through the pain from his incision, said, “This is the first time I haven’t been … it’s a week without dialysis.”

Strouth received his transplanted kidney from St. Catherine University employee Scott Pakudaitis, who had just months earlier responded to a message Strouth placed on Twitter and Facebook.

Strouth had just found out he would need a transplant and was making an appeal for his vast network of friends to get the word out. Little did either of the two men know at the time that Pakudaitis would provide the perfect match.

Pakudaitis said he has been looking forward to this week for quite awhile, when his gift of a kidney could help spare the life of someone in need.

When asked if he had any doubt, reservation or anxiety about doctors removing one of his healthy organs, he said, “Actually I was very excited about it. In fact, the night before (the surgery) I went out dancing.”

Pakudaitis said it took about five hours for the medical team to harvest his kidney and immediately transplant it into Strouth Tuesday. Though he was given the option to back out right up to the moment of the kidney’s removal, he said it never even entered his mind.

“Obviously I’m experiencing a little bit of physical pain now, but that’s nothing compared to what he was going through with dialysis and his disease,” Pakudaitis explained.

The actual transplant was performed by Dr. Ty Dunn, who explained that living donor kidneys provide the best long term outcomes and immediate kidney function for the patient. That often translates to decreased complications and the benefit of not having to wait for up to five years on “the list.”

When asked about his way of thanking Scott for his unselfish generosity, Strouth simply responded, “There is no thank you gift in the world that’s really going to cut it. No flowers, no watch — that’s just not it. Instead, I promise to him to be the best that I can be.”

He added there is also a much larger mission of sharing the story that goes beyond the unique nature of how these two cyber friends came together.

“The fact we can tell the story to get people to think about becoming a live donor, cause there’s a lot of people who could use the help,” he said.

Pakudaitis said he hopes his gift of life will inspire others to do the same.

“I guess it makes me feel good I helped someone in a very significant way,” he said.

http://wcco.com/health/kidney.transplant.facebook.2.1350676.html