Kidney donor and recipient doing fineRICHARD GOULD/HERALD STAFF WRITER
JACKSON - Just 19 days after her friend's selfless act vaulted her to the top of the kidney transplant list, Pat Ziesman lay in her hospital bed as her new kidney began to function.
That was Nov. 24. Pat is currently recovering at the VCU Medical Center in Richmond.
What pushed Pat to the top of the recipient list was her friend, Lynda Geanes' decision to donate a kidney to her. But, Lynda's kidney wasn't a match for Pat. That's why Lynda turned to the Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center and its Living / Deceased Donor Exchange Program.
The center's program allows incompatible living donors to donate a kidney to an unknown but compatible recipient in exchange for their friend or loved one being moved to the top of their blood group on the donor waiting list.
Once at the top of the list most transplant candidates face a wait of one to six months. Pat was fortunate and got her transplant much faster than expected.
Donor kidneys come in two varieties - those that come from living donors and those recovered from people that have died. Of the two living donor kidneys tend to function better and last longer because they are usually only outside the body for 20 minutes or so while cadaver kidneys can be out of the body for up to 30 hours according to VCU Medical Center's Transplant Coordinator Maureen Bell.
While the individual who received Lynda's kidney started feeling the benefit right away but Pat remained in intensive care for a couple of days after her transplant because it took her new kidney some time to begin to function properly.
Last Thursday Lynda went to the VCU Medical Center's Transplant Center for a post-op check up and the doctors told her that she's doing fine. While Lynda was there she took the time to visit Pat and saw that she's doing fine and reports that her kidney is now functioning at 100 percent.
In an e-mail Lynda said, “I personally feel if I died right now, I have done something important to help another human, in fact two of them.”
For more information on organ donation contact LifeNet Health at 1 (800) 847-7831 or go online at
www.donatelife.net or
www.unos.org.
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