Updated: March 4, 2011 4:17 p.m.
Marine sergeant waits for new kidney
By BRITTANY LEVINE
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
After returning from a year in Iraq in 2009, Chadwick got married, re-enlisted for another four years and became the father of a baby girl. During his wife's pregnancy, he started feeling weak and suffered strong headaches. His doctors told him it might be his kidneys and scheduled him for a biopsy.
"I've always been a healthy person," said Chadwick, 23. "It felt like I was just sucker punched. It really caught us off guard."
The day he was supposed to get his kidneys tested, his daughter, Ella Marie, was born.
After that, he kept putting off his check-ups to take care of his baby, now 4 months old. But the headaches were getting worse and his wife, Victoria, urged him to get tested.
Doctors told him his kidneys were scarred. He was diagnosed with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis, or rapid kidney failure. In Chadwick's case, the cause is unknown.
He will have to be on dialysis until doctors can find him a replacement kidney. He's on a waiting list at the University of San Diego Medical Center.
Due to his failing health, Chadwick recently moved from his post as an infantryman in the 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton to a Marine Corps reserve unit called the 4th Tank Battalion. He spends four hours on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays having his blood cleaned for him by a machine at Naval Medical Center San Diego. Without properly functioning kidneys, toxins can build up in the body.
On Tuesdays and Thursdays, he processes military recruits at the Navy and Marine Corps Reserve Center.
"Of course there were a lot of sleepless nights when he was over there (in Iraq)," said Victoria Chadwick, 28. "Now I feel the same way – sad. I just want my family to be healthy."
While her husband was in Iraq, Victoria dedicated her time to working for Operation Gratitude, a volunteer group that sends care packages to deployed troops. She packed boxes, made labels and did anything to get her mind off the what-ifs of wartime.
Faced with a new challenge, Victoria again reached out to Operation Gratitude. Jacob's mother wrote a letter that the group's founder, Carolyn Blashek, sent to her contact list asking for help. (Read the letter here.)
None of Jacob's immediate family members can help him. His mother and brother both have incompatible blood types. If a relative can't donate a kidney, live donors can be difficult to find. The wait list Chadwick is on is for a cadaver donor.
The day Blashek sent out the note, dozens of e-mails rolled in. But even if someone is willing to be a donor, the process takes time.
Donors undergo X-rays and multiple medical exams, including urine and psychiatric tests. Chadwick understands it would be a big sacrifice for a stranger to make.
Blood type isn't the only hurdle in finding a match. Lab technicians must mix Chadwick's blood with that of a possible donor and make sure they work well together. Tissue matching also is a factor.
"A kidney transplant is not going to happen tomorrow," Chadwick said. "We're trying to build ourselves an arsenal of people who may be interested."
Going through dialysis makes him weak, something he's not used to. Sometimes he can barely hold up a shower head.
"Sometimes I feel like a 7-year-old trapped in a 23-year-old's body," he said. "Being my age, I can't live the rest of my life on dialysis."
Contact the writer: blevine@ocregister.com, twitter.com/newssanclemente or 949-492-5135
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