Posts Tagged ‘kidney donor’

Taxi driver gives customer a kidney

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

From: KSDK.COM

NBC — For a woman in Midland, Texas, years of chatting with her taxicab driver has turned into an amazing story of friendship.

And a life-saving sacrifice.

“Our relationship? Opposites attract I guess,” says cabbie Carol Hambright.

For Hambright, Keri Evans is more than just one of her clients.

“I have Type 1 diabetes. I have had it for 48 years. This is why my kidneys have failed. I’ve been on dialysis for 2 1/2 years,” Evans relates.

Because of her condition, Evans is in need of a kidney transplant. But she never thought her cab driver would be the one willing to donate a kidney in her time of need.

“Everybody’s like, I can’t believe you’re giving up your kidney. I said well, you only need one,” says driver Hambright.

Hambright has been taking Evans to her dialysis for the past 2 1/2 years..

Somewhere along the way, their chats became more like those of old friends.

And Hambright went from cab driver to lifesaver.

“She told me you don’t have to worry about picking me up tomorrow. She said I quit. I said excuse me. I’m not going to make it, I can’t get a kidney. That’s when I told her I’ll give you mine,” the cab driver relates.

Hambright’s offer caught Evans by surprise.

Evans says most people dread and fear surgery. But her attitude is just the opposite.

She welcomes going under the knife.

“Dialysis is really hard.”

“People should donate if they can. It’s not that hard to do,” Hambright advises.

The pair Will go through some more tests this week to make sure they’re a match.

NBC

Siblings go through kidney transplant

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Updated: Saturday, 27 Jun 2009, 9:02 PM EDT
Published : Saturday, 27 Jun 2009, 7:32 PM EDT

* Alyssa Ivanson

FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) – Brent Doctor was an active person. He grew up helping his father on the farm and was a professional kickboxer. Sitting for several hours each day is not his idea of a good time, but that’s what he has to do for his dialysis treatments.

“It’s now a part of my life. I do four dialysis treatments a day and each takes 30 to 40 minutes,” Doctor said.

When he was 12 years old, Doctor was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. Diabetes is a leading cause of kidney failure, or end-stage renal disease.

“Diabetics on dialysis have a three year survival rate of only 35 percent, so they need a transplant and they need it now,” Lutheran Hospital Kidney Transplant Program Director and Surgeon Dr. Tarik Kizilisik said.

Doctor, 30, went into the hospital in November 2008 with kidney failure. He started dialysis at home in December. But, he didn’t have to wait for a kidney long.

“I have an extra one for a reason and thankfully I get to help him out,” Doctor’s half sister Jenny McConnell said.

Doctor was adopted as a baby. When he was 18, he put his information up on an adoption Web site. Four years ago, Doctor’s birth mom found him.

“We’re still getting to know each other, but it seems like we were never apart. He fits in so well with us and has so many similarities to our mother, it’s like I’ve known him my whole life,” McConnell said.

Last April, their mother, who also has diabetes, needed a kidney transplant. McConnell, 26, wasn’t a match.

“When I couldn’t help her, I wanted to help him, no questions. I never hesitated. I knew it was going to come, but I didn’t know it would be so early,” McConnell said.

Just a few months later Doctor went into kidney failure. This time, McConnell was a match.

“We were very excited and it’s creating a stronger bond,” Doctor said.

After the transplant, Doctor’s looking forward to spending more time being active with his daughter, 8-year-old Cara, and going back to school to be a nurse to work with other diabetics.

McConnell’s also a mom. Her son, 4-year-old Bryce, said he’s going to help her get well after the surgery.

“He gave me a big hug and kiss and told me good luck and that he was in my heart no matter what,” McConnell said.

McConnell hopes the surgery will motivate her to be healthy.

“It’s going to make me live a healthier lifestyle so down the road I won’t become a diabetic,” McConnell said.

The Transplant Surgery

Doctor and McConnell’s transplant was scheduled for Wednesday morning at the Lutheran Hospital Kidney Transplant Center. It started two years ago, and outside of Indianapolis, is the only other place for kidney transplants in Indiana, said Dr. Kizilisik.

Doctor’s transplant was the center’s 52nd.

“I would like to have more. I wish we had 150. We have a great team here. We’re ready. We could do two or three transplants a day, just show me the organs,” Dr. Kizilisik said.

At Lutheran, there are 69 patients on the waiting list for a kidney and another 88 are getting evaluated.

“Since opening this program, patients aren’t traveling and spending a lot of time and money. Now they can come to us,” Dr. Kizilisik said.

He added Lutheran is doing the follow-up care for about 500 patients who already had transplants. Kizilisik said Lutheran is also one of the few transplant centers in the country to use robotic surgery for the donor patient.

Technology over the years has changed the donor surgery. The donor used to have a painful incision that cut the muscle under the rib cage.

Now at Lutheran, Dr. Erik Weise uses the da Vinci robot to take the kidney out.

“Removing a kidney from a living patient is a procedure where nothing can go wrong. It’s one of the highest stakes surgeries we do,” Weise, the Director of Robotic Surgery at Lutheran said.

Weise can also do the surgery laparoscopically. Either way, the incisions are much smaller and heal much faster. There are three incisions in the abdomen about the size of a pinky finger and then another cut either above the belly button or in the groin to remove the kidney.

“The kidney is attached by blood vessels and the urine tube, which takes urine to the bladder. I free up the kidney inside through the three small little holes, and cut the urine channel and make sure the kidney is making good urine,” Weise said. “Then I make a small incision, remove the blood flow and remove the kidney immediately, so it’s deprived of blood for a very short time.”

Dr. Weise used a stapler with tiny staples to cut off the vein and artery connected to the kidney. The kidney is put in a bag and then pulled out of the donor’s body.

While Dr. Weise was working on freeing up McConnell’s kidney, Dr. Kizilisik was in the operating room next door preparing Doctor to receive the new kidney.

“I open and prepare where we will put the kidney in while the donor surgery is happening,” Dr. Kizilisik said.

Dr. Kizilisik came into the donor surgery and was standing buy with a bucket of ice. As soon as the kidney came out of McConnell, Dr. Weise put it

in the bucket.

Dr. Kizilisik started working on the kidney to make sure it was a good organ. He also started flushing it to get all of McConnell’s blood out of it and cooled it down in ice. After working on it for a few minutes, he carried it through a short hallway into the operating room where Doctor was ready for the transplant.

Once the kidney was out, Dr. Weise’s surgical team started the process of closing McConnell up to finish her surgery. Her surgery lasted about two hours.

Once he was in the second operating room, Dr. Kizilisik continued to work on the kidney, making sure all the blood was flushed out. He also marked the veins and arteries to make it easier to connect them in Doctor’s body.

After connecting the blood flow of McConnell’s kidney in Doctor’s body, Dr. Kizilisik used a doppler machine to make sure blood was beating through it.

Dr. Kizilisik also checked to make sure the kidney was making urine by squeezing the ureter, which connects to the bladder. When urine spayed out, he knew the kidney was working.

“The kidney is put in the groin area, not where the native kidneys are. Because we have to hook the kidney artery and vein to the vessels and hood the ureter to the bladder, for that the most suitable area is the groin,” Dr. Kizilisik said.

After the ureter was connected to the bladder, the surgical team checked the urine meter bag to make sure Doctor’s new kidney was functioning.

Two days after surgery, both McConnell and Doctor were doing well. McConnell was scheduled to go home from the hospital on Friday and Doctor should be able to go home on Monday.

Now that the surgery is over, Doctor will go to Lutheran for checkups two times a week for the first month.

“We follow them very closely and act proactively if there are any problems,” Dr. Kizilisik said.

That close follow-up care is one reason Kizilisik said Lutheran’s kidney rejection rate is 6 percent when the usual rejection rate of a kidney transplant is around 15 to 20 percent.

Doctor will also take immunosuppressant medications to help prevent his body from rejecting the kidney for the life of his transplanted kidney.

Kidneys from a living donor can last about 15 to 20 years, while a kidney transplanted from a cadaver, or person who died, lasts about 10 to 12 years.

Organ Donation and Transplant Wait Lists

Dr. Kizilisik said about 100,000 people in the United States are waiting to get a transplanted kidney. Only about 15,000 to 16,000 kidneys come from cadavers a year, and that leaves a large gap of people who still need a kidney.

That gap is widening and wait times are getting longer. The average wait time in Indiana for kidney is three years. Two years ago the wait time was about 18 months, Dr. Kizilisik said.

He said people living longer and better diagnosis of kidney failure are contributing to the longer wait times.

“People die waiting for a kidney. We need more organs,” Dr. Kizilisik.

Almost half of the transplants at Lutheran so far have been from living donors. Usually the donor knows the recipient, but two people have volunteered to donate their kidney without having a recipient in mind.

“We’re particularly touched with patients who come in unattached. It’s wonderful to be a part of when a healthy person gives someone with medical needs the gift of life,” Dr. Weise said.

Dr. Kizilisik said people can survive on dialysis for several years, but it’s not meant as a long term treatment. It’s designed to keep the people waiting for a transplant alive long enough to get a new organ.

“If there’s ever the opportunity to do something really great for someone else, even if it’s just a test, even if you aren’t a match, I wouldn’t hesitate to do it,” McConnell said.
McConnell isn’t worried about having one kidney.

“Actually 60 percent of one kidney is enough. So why did God give us two kidneys? God gave us two kidneys so we can donate one of them,” Dr. Kizilisik said.

If someone donates a kidney and has kidney problems later in life, Dr. Weise said that person is moved to the top of the waiting list.

“It’s very rare for a patient who donates a kidney to get into trouble. Someone who is a candidate for kidney donation is screened to have two perfect kidneys,” Dr. Weise said.

For more information, contact Lutheran Hospital Kidney Transplant Center at (260) 435-6275.

http://www.wane.com/dpp/mobile/local_wane_ftwayne_half_siblings_go_through_kidney_transplant_200906271701

Donate a kidney

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009


The Bakersfield Californian | Sunday, Jul 19 2009 07:51 PM

Last Updated Sunday, Jul 19 2009 07:51 PM

It was particularly interesting to read the recent article about kidney transplants and the need for live kidney donors. I am at home recovering, less than two weeks after donating a kidney to a 17-year-old family friend at UCLA. It was a wonderful experience, the most profound in my almost 52 years of life.

I am certainly not a hero. I feel privileged to be able to take part in an experience that is truly life changing. Danielle has already regained her health and will no longer spend 15 hours a week at dialysis and feel lousy in between treatments. I look forward to watching her graduate from high school, college and medical school. This remarkable young lady plans to become a nephrologist and help other young people who suffer kidney failure.

If you have an opportunity to donate a kidney, please consider it. The success rate for live- donor kidney transplants is much greater than with cadaver donors and the risk to the donor is minimal. (UCLA has never lost a donor.)

My tummy hurts a bit, but I’m sure no more than if I had a C-section. I’ll be back to work this month and Danielle will be back to school in the fall. I’ve been blessed with a third daughter and Danielle will have the healthy and joyful life she was meant to have.

CAROLYN BEHM SHERMAN

Bakersfield

http://www.bakersfield.com/opinion/letters/x1216783530/Donate-a-kidney

Co-workers share stronger bond after kidney donation

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009


By Shelia M. Poole

Longtime co-workers Ceri McCarron and Betty Egwenike have shared stories about raising children, caring for ailing parents and their travels.

Now, they share an even stronger bond. McCarron recently donated a kidney to Egwenike, who was diagnosed with kidney disease several years ago and was on dialysis three days a week.

What makes their story even more compelling is that although the women worked together for more than 20 years and considered themselves workplace friends, they remained relative strangers outside the job.

“I think the conversations we’ve had in the last couple of weeks have been on a much deeper level,” said McCarron, 44, who lives in East Atlanta with her husband, two children and a menagerie of pets. “I never even had her phone number until I got it at the hospital.”

McCarron and Egwenike, 52, are now both home recuperating. The two, who work in the archives department of the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library & Museum, were part of a living donation, which takes place when a living person donates an organ, or part of one. Usually, the donor is an immediate family member, such as a sibling, a child or a parent. But sometimes the donor can be a friend, co-worker or a more distant relative, according to the American Kidney Foundation.

In 2008, 5,967 of the 16,517 kidney transplants came from living donors.

More than 102,000 people in the U.S. are waiting for an organ transplant, according to the Virginia-based United Network for Organ Sharing. About three-fourths of people on the list are waiting for a kidney transplant.

Egwenike said several members of her family have high blood pressure or heart disease, so more than likely, she thought her donor would be a total stranger. Dr. Miguel Tan, who performed the surgery on McCarron at Piedmont Hospital, said the wait times are generally shorter for organs for living donors. There’s also less trauma to the organ, the outcomes are better and evaluations are done on living patients, so their health profiles are well-known.

But one day the two were talking about the transplant and hit on the subject of blood type. It turned out both shared the same blood type — O negative — and a seed was planted.

“She initiated it,” Egwenike said. The disease produces cysts in the kidneys and eventually causes the organs to deteriorate and stop functioning. By the time she was diagnosed, Egwenike said 55 percent of her kidney function was gone. “I was surprised she was actually going to do it. I was skeptical because you can change your mind at any time. I kind of stayed in the background because I didn’t want to be harassing her. I didn’t ask, it was out of her heart.”

It also surprised James A. Yancey Jr., an archivist at the Carter Library, who supervises both women.

“I am awed by this whole process,” he said. “I’m surprised anyone would do this. They’re not kin. They were friendly because they worked together, but they didn’t party together. I don’t think there was an association after work. She (McCarron) put into practice what a lot of people talk about and that’s love.”

As far as McCarron is concerned, it was the right thing to do. “I just knew … I’d seen her struggle with her health for a while and she always did it with such dignity,” she said. “I could tell she was doing what she needed to do to take care of herself, work, raise a daughter and a marriage.”

McCarron spent hours researching the process and went through several tests to determine if she was a match and if her kidneys were healthy. At first her husband, worried about the longtime implications on her health, wasn’t too keen on the idea, but he later came around.

“We both agreed that if something were to happen to Miss Betty, how could we live with ourselves knowing we have helped,” McCarron said.

Egwenike is thankful for the gift. She said she feels much better and has no doubt McCarron took good care of her kidneys.

“Yeah,” she said, laughing. “She drank a lot of water.”

Egwenike said her husband’s friends would like to have a mass in McCarron’s honor. “It was just a beautiful gift,” she said. “She’s an angel.”

“I don’t think it will be the way it was pre-surgery,” McCarron said of her friendship with Egwenike. “Where it leads, I don’t know. I’ll just let it unfold.”


Member, Board of Directors of OPTN/UNOS (General Public Representative – Living Donor, 2008-2011) and Executive Committee, 2009-2010
Invited Attendee to the OPTN/UNOS Kidney Transplantation Committee while on the board
Member of the Editorial Board of the UNOS Foundation’s http://www.transplantliving.org/, 2005 to present, and the NKF Transplant Chronicles, 2009.
Living kidney donor, 2003
291 whole blood and platelet pheresis donations & counting, 1976-present,

Please consider yourself asked! Sign up to donate blood today at http://redcross.org/donate/give/ or call 1-800-GIVE-LIFE (1-800-448-3543). Thanks!

Helping A Neighbor In Need

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Bemus Point Woman Receives Kidney From Neighbor

By Scott Kindberg – skindberg@post-journal.com
POSTED: July 19, 2009

Email: “Helping A Neighbor In Need”

The letter was dated Jan. 14, 2001.

The sender was Franklin Laundry, a dear friend and retired pastor, who, until the day he died, always offered words of wisdom and counsel whenever I would see him.

But when I recently found the missive tucked into the top drawer of my oak desk – neatly typed and signed “Uncle Franklin” – I have to admit I was floored by how he ended it.

“When cheerfulness is kept up against all odds,” Franklin wrote, “it is the greatest form of courage.”

When the goose bumps on my arms finally disappeared, I couldn’t help but think how appropriate that quote – taken from one of my late friend’s daily devotionals – was for the story that follows below.

Heck, it could very well be the mantra of two Chautauqua County women, who, until six months ago, hardly knew each other, but today have a bond that will never be broken.

Sue Vincent of Jamestown gave Laurie Beaton of Bemus Point a new lease on life. In the process, they showed their family and friends the power of positive thinking.

When cheerfulness is kept up against all odds, it is the greatest form of courage.

Somewhere, Franklin is smiling.

Riley Beaton, the youngest of Laurie and Kevin Beaton’s four children, sat in Sue Vincent’s seventh-grade health class at Maple Grove Junior-Senior High School late last year. The topic was the body’s internal organs.

At one point during the discussion about kidneys, Riley, not normally the talkative sort, raised his hand.

“Riley?” Sue asked, somewhat surprised.

“My mother needs a kidney transplant,” the youngster said matter of factly.

Stunned, Sue later ran into Kevin at Bemus Point Elementary School where they both teach physical education and he confirmed his son’s revelation.

What Kevin couldn’t have known then was that the person who would ultimately save his wife’s life was the person looking at him.

Sue and Laurie were about to embark on an amazing odyssey. They just didn’t know it yet.

Laurie is 47 and teaches elementary physical education in the Pine Valley Central School District. After developing kidney issues as far back as 20 years ago, she learned in the early 1990s that she had a condition known as Alport Syndrome, a highly degenerative kidney disease.

“It was a real gradual process,” Laurie said. “If I didn’t know I had the disease, I wouldn’t have known it. I felt just normal and fine.”

But about three years ago, her kidney function began to drop considerably and in the last two years she developed other conditions, including water retention, and elevated blood pressure and cholesterol. By last fall – after a complete head-to-toe physical – Laurie was urged to begin compiling a list of prospective kidney donors.

A transplant was no longer in the distant future.

“It got to the point where the doctor said we have to start this process,” Laurie said as she sat with Kevin on a couch at their Bemus Point home. “We had talked about it, but it was down the road. But I knew once my function dropped to 15 percent that’s when you get the ball rolling. I knew it, but I really didn’t want to face it until he said, ‘Where do you want your transplant done?’ ”

The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center was selected as the site almost immediately.

Finding a donor?

Not so fast.

“The hard part was just being patient,” Kevin said.

Sue, 52, is married to Jim, they live in Jamestown and they have three children – Dan (25), Kevin (22) and Amy (20). And although Sue teaches in the Bemus Point Central School District with Kevin Beaton they were more colleagues than personal friends.

But when he mentioned last December that he was looking for an organ donor for Laurie, Sue began thinking about being tested to see if she would be a match.

“I thought about that fact that if I needed a kidney I would hope people would come forward for me,” Sue said. “It’s a life.”

Keeping her thoughts initially to herself, Sue researched kidney transplants on the Internet, and drew on her experience as a health teacher and also on her awareness of the surgery gleaned from when a family member had donated a kidney a few years before.

Finally, knowing her blood type was O-positive, like Laurie’s, Sue, with Jim’s blessing, donated her blood and then had to wait several weeks to see if she could ultimately be an organ donor.

Time was of the essence because the first three potential donors – a brother, a sister-in-law and a friend – were not a match and Laurie’s condition was getting worse.

“Thank goodness, in the second round (of testing), Sue was a match,” Laurie said. “I’ll never forget it.”

A woman who Laurie only really knew from afar was going to be the one to save her life.

“Never once did she show me she had a second thought,” Jim said. “She wanted to say that she did everything she could. … She really has a lot of guts.”

And a loving heart.

When an announcement was made over the public address system at PVCS that “Mrs. Beaton” had a match, students could be heard cheering.

Sue found out she was a match in March, but that was just the first hurdle.

“I had the million dollar physical,” she said. “I had every inch of me scanned, and there were X-rays, blood work and stress tests.”

“That started the whole process of ups and downs and whether she was going to qualify or not,” Laurie said.

Finally, in April, the families received confirmation that Sue would indeed be the donor. The tentative surgery was set for May 18 at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. But that date was moved back to June 10 when Laurie experienced complications related to her potassium level.

“I was feeling pretty good,” Laurie said. “I was tired, but nothing else was really up. Then we got a date of June 10 and all hell broke loose between May 18 and June 10.”

How bad was it?

Laurie’s kidney function was down to 3 percent; her hemogloblin levels were dropping and she began experiencing breathing problems. They were so bad, in fact, that she’d sleep for about an hour only to wake up “kind of panicky because I couldn’t breathe.”

Ultimately, she was admitted to Hamot Medical Center in Erie to begin a series of dialysis treatments in the days leading up to her transplant date. After a final treatment on Monday, June 8, Laurie and Kevin left for Pittsburgh and an appointment at 10 a.m., June 9 at UPMC.

Doctors performed many tests and finally cleared Laurie for surgery at 1:30 p.m. the next day.

“We were anxious about the reality of it all,” said Wendy Johnson, Laurie’s sister. “She was so anxious to feel good. She’s very optimistic and she’s very practical. She needed a new kidney and she wanted it. Period.”

Sue was more than happy to oblige.

“I was really excited to have a date to do it,” she said. “I wasn’t nervous at all. I was anxious to get this done and get her back on her feet.”

Laurie had no doubt about the outcome.

“First of all, that’s my nature,” she said. “I think that I tend to see the positive as opposed to the negative.”

The surgery lasted four hours and went flawlessly. The results were immediate.

“The minute they hook the kidney up to the blood supply it starts working,” Laurie said. “I guess in the first hour if you have a live donor kidney they hope it will put out 30 ccs of urine. Mine put out 1,100. It just started working like crazy from the get-go.

“I feel as if it wasn’t me that it happened to, but that it was a story about somebody else.”

In reality, though, it was a story about two people, who were virtual strangers at the start, but like sisters at the end.

Fittingly, a day after surgery, Laurie’s sister, Wendy, grabbed her cell phone and took a photo of the women, who bear a remarkable resemblance to each other, and titled it “Angels.”

“I was just amazed at the two of them before, during and after,” Wendy said. “They were constantly going back and forth visiting each other. … They were both glowing. No one should look that good after surgery, and I just thought this is a Kodak moment.”

Wendy has one more moment to share, one she put to paper in the form of poem as a tribute to what Sue did for Laurie her family.

“I didn’t even think there were words how I felt, but then they came,” Wendy said. “I haven’t given it to her yet. We felt if she read it in the newspaper, it would be more of a surprise.”

So, here it goes, Sue. Enjoy Wendy’s Sunday surprise, entitled “By Design.”

More than a hero, you stepped up to the plate,

Opened your door to God’s will and to my sister’s fate.

You, the quiet leader, setting the pace

Chose to break your stride to help the human race.

I wish there were more like you, thinking unselfishly, so kindly

Imagine a world like that with no souls walking blindly

No more “I don’t care,” no more unfeeling rude

You give light to greater thought and depth to attitude

You cause me to wonder; I’m overwhelmed with your grace

You cause me to look up and see a brighter place

I’m at a loss for words when it comes to you

How can I express what words alone can’t do?

On a much smaller scale, in our little corner of the world

Darkness prevailed ’til you brought back our little girl

You, one single person, one fine lady, by design

Turned our world right side up when you brought back our sunshine

More than five weeks after receiving her new kidney, Laurie said she’s undecided about when she’ll return to work at Pine Valley Central School.

”One doctor said I could go back in September, one doctor said I could go back in four months, which would be October, and one said I could go back in six months, which would be December,” she said. ”The smart thing would be to wait until December, but I don’t know. I miss not being there. I’m making the best of being off, but I really like doing what I do.”

As for Sue, she’s also doing well. Two weeks post-op, she was walking two miles a night and not looking at all like someone who had just donated a kidney.

”Everybody has come up to me and given me a hug, telling me what a wonderful thing I’ve done,” she said. ” … It’s an awesome feeling what you can do for somebody.”