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Dialysis Discussion => Dialysis: News Articles => Topic started by: okarol on June 24, 2008, 11:09:12 AM

Title: War hero with kidney to spare finds donor recipient on Web
Post by: okarol on June 24, 2008, 11:09:12 AM
War hero with kidney to spare finds donor recipient on Web

By Eva Wolchover  |   Sunday, June 22, 2008  |  http://www.bostonherald.com  |  Local Coverage

Arlington restaurant owner Ricardo Mermet saw more than a hero in Vietnam vet and war amputee Karl D. Chapin of Grafton. He saw his guardian angel.

Until Tuesday, Mermet, a native of Argentina who co-owns Tango restaurant with his wife, Nancy, was in desperate need of a new kidney. Years of diabetes and hypertension had taken their toll, and Mermet had spent the last 18 months undergoing thrice-weekly sessions of dialysis while his name sat unmoved on the national organ donation list (UNOS).

Chapin, 59 is a decorated amputee who lost his right hand at Hamburger Hill in Vietnam. He came across Mermet’s plea for a kidney on matchingdonors.com, a Canton-based Web site that matches donors with patients in need of transplants.

After a series of hurdles and months of screening at Massachusetts General Hospital, Chapin finally donated his left kidney to Mermet, 61, on Tuesday. By Wednesday, Mermet was up and about, feeling better than he had in years, he said.

“This guy showed me that we have nice people in the world,” Mermet said. “It’s unbelievable because he didn’t know me. He’s like my angel.”

Chapin said he was inspired to donate his kidney after coming across his old organ donor card from 1973.

“I started doing research, and I found out that living organs have a much better chance of adaptablility than a cadaver donor,” he said.

When quick search of the site led him to Mermet’s page, Chapin knew right away he’d found his recipient.

“I knew it had to be,” he said. “This man was dying, and somebody had to do something or he’s not going to see his next grandchild. I just felt very attached to this man. I don’t know why, I just did.”

But getting to the operating table wasn’t easy. Very early in the screening process, a doctor taking note of Chapin’s disability told him that he “had done enough for his country” and refused to approve the donation, Chapin said.

“I took it personally. But I also took offense for every veteran, disabled or not. The battle was on.”

After months of phone calls and meetings with surgeons and specialists, Chapin found another doctor willing to sign the approval.

“With all the highs and lows, and yeses and nos and maybes, we got a date, June 17,” Chapin said.

When asked which kidney he’d like to donate, he said, “Doc, you gotta take the left, because that’s the one I’ve been teaching Spanish to.’ ” he joked.

“The operation was so successful. They’ve never witnessed a man heal so quickly. As soon as they put the kidney in, it started to function immediately. He was up the next day and came to see me. He’s just a sweet, sweet man.”

Mermet said he can’t wait to start working regular hours at the restuarant again and plans to travel to Argentina soon - a trip he took annually before falling ill.

“It’s unbelievable,” Mermet said. “This guy is incredible. It was a perfect kidney. The first day with this, right away I get out of bed.”

Modern science has been good to Chapin, too. In May, the retired accounts receivable manager was the recipient of one of the world’s first bionic hands - the i-LIMB Hand - made by Hanger Inc. in Leominster. For the first time in 40 years, he has been able to flex his fingers, shake hands and gracefully handle objects. The i-LIMB hit the market in 2007 and costs $55,000.

Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/general/view.bg?articleid=1102426
Title: Re: War hero with kidney to spare finds donor recipient on Web
Post by: okarol on June 25, 2008, 12:01:25 AM
Jun 24, 2008 3:48 pm US/Eastern
     
Bionic Hero Saves Stranger's Life With Kidney

Reporting
David Wade

BOSTON (WBZ) ― Asking Karl Chapin about his life is like Googling "interesting story." A lot comes up—a black belt, a scuba diver, a sky diver, and a war hero. Chapin has a list of military honors—the Purple Heart, the Bronze Star—that he reads as a casually as a grocery list.

Chapin has half an arm. He lost the other half saving a man in Vietnam. Modest, Chapin said, "that doesn't make me a hero, it makes me a soldier."

How he lost his arm is only part of what makes him an interesting story. There's also his new "bionic arm." Yes, bionic. He thinks it, his fingers do it. To Chapin, "it looks like something out of 'I-Robot.'"

And, there is the organ story…

About a year ago, Chapin found his old organ donation card and wondered why he should wait for death. "People live with one kidney, people are born with one kidney. So, I figured, I'll give up a kidney."

Chapin used MatchingDonors.com, a sort of classified list of people looking for an organ donation. Chapin found a total stranger and called him, "I said, 'Know what? I'm going to help you.'"

Riccardo Mermet, the owner of an Arlington restaurant, was at Massachusetts General Hospital and was badly in need of a kidney. Chapin set things up and everyone was excited—until he met the doctor.

"The doctor looked me in the eye and said, 'I am not going to approve this. You're a war hero and you've done enough for this country. I am not going to approve a surgery you don't need to save someone that you do not know."

Furious, Chapin began making calls and lodging complaints. He wasn't going away, "even if the doctor said that I had done enough for my country, I wanted to do one more thing for someone I didn't know."

The hospital did bring him back. And, he was a match.

Two weeks ago, Chapin and Riccardo met for the first time. And, last Tuesday, the had the surgery.

Everything went perfectly. Chapin's wife, Patricia, was proud, "this happens to be huge. It will make a big difference in this man's life and in his family's life."

So, if you see a man with a bionic arm, say hello. But, if you ask him what he's been up to and he says, "not much", don't believe him. And, don't believe him when he says that he's not a hero.

http://wbztv.com/local/Kidney.Karl.Chapin.2.755947.html
Title: Re: War hero with kidney to spare finds donor recipient on Web
Post by: donnia on June 25, 2008, 05:06:39 AM
Hero just doesn't seem to be a big enough word for this man.  So very inspiring.