Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Donate a kidney to a stranger, save a relative Brooke Barker - Daily Herald
How does it feel to not be able to donate a kidney to your own sister? Well, just ask GiGi Allred of Orem.
“I was devastated. It was something I’d planned on for 16 years,” said Allred. “I felt like I let my sister down.”
Earlier this year, Allred found out that she didn’t have the same blood type as Candace Lindquist, her sister, and a transplant would be impossible. But this story has a happy ending.
On July 3, Lindquist received a kidney and Allred was still able to donate -- just not to her sister. A new program at LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City made it possible for Allred to give her kidney to a perfect match, Jennifer Morison, and in turn, move Lindquist to the top of the waiting list for her blood type. A kidney for her came via a Good Samaritan at the same time.
It's called a living-donor paired exchange transplant and has the ability to largely reduce the wait time for kidney patients and increase the number of living-donors, according to Dr. LeGrand Belnap, transplant surgeon and director of the transplant program at LDS Hospital.
The way it works is that a patient with kidney failure and a willing but unsuitable donor is paired with someone else in the same situation. Both patients get transplants and both donors are able to give a kidney to a better match. The donor could be a friend, relative or complete stranger.
"The potential is enormous," said Belnap, who estimated that living-donor transplants are about 15 percent more effective than deceased donors. The program will eventually link all of the transplant centers in neighboring states together, with willing family members or friends connected with those who are awaiting the perfect match.
Right now, Belnap said the need for kidneys is continuing to grow, and this recent surgery eliminated two of the nearly 72,000 holding out on waiting lists around the United States.
"We are just trying to do one more thing to make lives better for the people who need it," he said.
Although the program sounds simple, and LDS Hospital had considered it before, Belnap said they were reluctant to actually start it. It has only been used in several transplant centers around the country -- mostly in the East.
"We are one of the first in the West to do this, if not the first," he said.
The four surgeries happened in a matter of hours, with Allred going first and Lindquist finishing.
"It almost happened like clockwork," said Allred.
By the following morning, the recipient families noticed color in their faces and a forgotten energy.
"The next day I felt better than I had in years," said Morison. "It wasn't until after that I realized how always tired and run down I felt on dialysis."
She said that she will be forever grateful for Allred's donation, and is looking forward to one thing: Traveling. Dialysis kept her from backpacking across Europe, or exploring something on a whim, because she'd have to make definite plans to have dialysis on her journey.
"I told GiGi that I'd send her a postcard everywhere I went, saying, " 'Today I took your kidney here,' " she explained. "A gift is an understatement," said Morison. "It's my life."
The Good Samaritan -- Kristen Bylund, a BYU nursing student, chose to donate after being educated on organ donation.
"I just wanted to be able to help someone, and be able to have more empathy as a nurse for my patients," said Bylund.
The National Kidney Foundation of Utah and Idaho helps promote kidney education in middle schools and junior highs, and according to Sharon Miller, the organization's education coordinator, there are serious questions when it comes to kidney donation.
"People wonder 'will I be OK with one kidney?,' 'what happens if I lose my second kidney?'," Miller said, explaining that those who choose to donate will end up higher on waiting lists if their kidney fails later down the road.
She said the program has a potential to help kidney patients through Intermountain Donor Services, and people normally don't know much about kidneys unless there's been an issue in their family.
Brooke Barker is available at 344-2559 or bbarker@heraldextra.com.
http://www.heraldextra.com/content/view/228990/PHOTO: ASHLEY FRANSCELL/Daily Herald Last week the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City performed a living-donor transplant between (left to right) Jennifer Morison, Candace Lindquist, Dr. LeGrand Belnap, GiGi Allred and Kristen Bylund. Morison received Allred's kidney and because of Allred's donation her sister Candance Lindquist moved up on the list and received a kidney from Bylund, a BYU student. On Monday, July 16, 2007 during a press conference the women posed for a picture.