Just be glad you don't live in Canada, where the average wait for a cadaver kidney to become available is 8 years, which is a longer wait than many of the sub-classes of patients on the transplant list are expected to survive! My wife turned out not to be a match for me, and two friends who offered also both turned out not to be matches. Since I had type 0 blood, as do 60% of the people in Canada, the odds that all three donors would turn out to have either A, B, or AB blood were quite small. So I had to wait and endure the mounting complications of dialysis from December, 1996 to August, 2003. Because the number of people on dialysis around the world is increasing dramatically, while the total number of kidneys becoming available for transplant is stagnant in most countries, it will soon be the case that unless you have a friend or relative who is a donor or you buy a kidney in a foreign country, you will have to wait until past your life expectancy for a transplant.
I'm so sorry, sometimes life just sucks.
Just got word that my husband is not a match for me I guess maybe it is for the best. But, damn, I just want to scream and punch something. Why can't I get some good news for a change? So what now??? I just sit and freakin wait for the phone to ring???Sorry, just had to let it out.
Sorry to hear about the non-match with your husband. But Krowbar is correct - if your husband donates a kidney that is suppose to move you up on the list. My donor checked this all out because if she wasn't a match she was going to do that for me. Good luck and hang in there!!!!Sandyb
Quote from: Slywalker on July 30, 2007, 04:48:08 PMSorry to hear about the non-match with your husband. But Krowbar is correct - if your husband donates a kidney that is suppose to move you up on the list. My donor checked this all out because if she wasn't a match she was going to do that for me. Good luck and hang in there!!!!SandybI think what Krowbar meant was a simultaneous swap. Lets say you have two couples where one person in each wants to donate to their spouse but in both cases there is no match. Now lets say that the donor in each couple does match with the recipient in the opposite couple. Now you have a 4 way swap.They do these at the same time in the same hospital. They use 4 operating rooms with 4 surgical teams removing and transplanting kidneys at about the same time. In the end the two recipients walk away with new kidneys and everybody is happy.