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Personality Change of Kidney Transplant Patient

Caregivers | Last Active: Nov 21, 2023 | Replies (63)

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@cindyt63

My nephew has now had his fourth kidney transplant. His personality changed with each one. The first donor was a family member and had the least change. The others were cadaver kidneys. The third donor had high blood pressure and took medication for it. My nephew had to take BP medication because the kidney was accustomed to it. The doctors are all aware of these changes in the recipients but the information is not shared with the family or general public. It is up to us to do our research and learn as much as we can.

I had always heard that patients who undergo open heart surgery experience a change in their personality as well. I think it is more than just those who have open heart surgery that are affected. My husband has had angioplasty to insert two stents in a blocked artery and I saw a change in him. He later had to have a defibrillator installed and I have noticed even bigger changes and not for the good. He has changed to someone who has little or no interest in anything including personal hygiene. He is now 72 years old and refuses to do anything that will improve his ability to participate in things we had planned to do during retirement. I am 64 and although I have physical limitations that make me a little slower I am still doing what I can to maintain my mobility.

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Replies to "My nephew has now had his fourth kidney transplant. His personality changed with each one. The..."

Hello @cindyt63,

Thanks for sharing the story about your husband's personality changes as a result of his surgeries. Have you discussed any of these changes with his physician? It could be that he might be dealing with some low-grade depression. When patients spend time in the ICU, Post-Intensive Care Syndrome often results. You might want to see the discussion on Connect about that topic. Here is the link,
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/post-intensive-care-syndrome-pics-lets-talk/?pg=35#comment-313366
You are correct when you say, "It is up to us to do our research and learn as much as we can." It is important for every patient and their family members to do as much research as possible regarding their health conditions. In this way, all become better health-care consumers and take care of ourselves better.