Twins on road to recovery after kidney transplants
'REMARKABLE EVENT' | Could leave hospital next week
December 8, 2007
BY SUSAN HOGAN/ALBACH Staff Reporter/shogan@suntimes.com
Doctors at Children's Memorial Hospital were optimistic Friday about the condition of 10-year-old twins who received simultaneous kidney transplants this week.
They planned to move Nelly and Anji Polanco out of intensive care to the floor where other transplant patients recover. If all goes well, the girls could go home next week.
"The first thing we worry about is how well the kidneys are going to function," said Dr. Riccardo Superina, who performed the surgery on one of the girls. "Fortunately, they're functioning quite well."
A team of four surgeons performed the four-hour operations late Wednesday after kidneys became available from a donor who died in a traffic accident. The girls had been on a transplant list for six months.
"It's really a remarkable event," said Dr. Richard Cohn, the hospital's kidney transplant medical director. "You have identical twins. They each have the same kidney disease. They were both on dialysis. And each receive a kidney by the same donor."
Rachel Dalomba, the girls' mother, thanked the doctors and expressed condolences and gratitude toward the donor's family.
"I thank them because they gave both girls a chance to live a full and healthy life," she said. "They gave us the best gift. But, you know, they lost someone. I can imagine it being very tough for them."
Around their first birthday, the girls were diagnosed with cystinosis, a rare disease in which an amino acid, cystine, accumulates in the organs.
"They just stopped growing," Dalomba said. "I knew something was wrong."
The new kidneys will not be affected by the disease, the doctors said. The girls also have eye problems because of the disease, which doctors hope to control with eye drops and other medication.
Dalomba said she moved to Chicago from Rhode Island a few years ago so the twins could receive specialized health care. As their condition worsened earlier this year, the girls were put on dialysis.
"No more 5 a.m. dialysis," Dalomba said Friday. "They're happy about that. Not only am I going to get a little rest. They're going to get a little rest, too."
She said the twins were crying and fearful just before surgery. But now, they're looking forward to running and playing like other little girls.
"Anji's saying she's not going to be a shrimp anymore, she's going to grow," Dalomba said and laughed. "It's nice to see that they're acting like themselves so quickly after surgery."
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