Post Liver transplant story

Posted by amyintucson @amyintucson, Mar 1, 2019

Today it's 2 months post-transplant - time flies when you are having fun! I'm still on the weekly blood test and monthly liver ultrasound regimen. The liver has shown improvement in function but blood tests have remained mostly the same, continuing the anemia and kidney issues.

I received the call at 5:15 AM on December 28. The offer was a high risk liver - cardiac death donor who was Hep-C and Epstein Barr positive (I was negative on both.) We arrived at Mayo at 9:30 AM to begin prep. They hoped to do the surgery at 3:00 pm but the donor's family had not yet authorized the removal of life support system - I know that had to be an emotional time for all of them. Folks have wondered how you might be in a situation where you got the call and had to go back home. This was a situation where that could have happened but thankfully the dominoes fell into place. Surgery began around 6:00 PM and ended around 11:30 PM. My husband is keeping the text sent from the OR that said "old liver out, new one going in". Until after I saw the surgical report, I never knew that I did not have a gall bladder anymore - I somehow missed that in all my reading. The pathology report was interesting - I had a liver biopsy 11 years ago at UPenn (I was living in NJ at the time) that showed Sarcoidosis in the liver but upon review post-surgery I had nodular regenerative hyperplasia and not cirrhosis with no Sarcoidosis present. They assured me that the liver transplant was needed - my liver was toast. The disease has the same symptoms as cirrhosis - portal hypertension and esophageal varices. Dr. Aqel showed me a picture of my old liver - it looked like bad meat - as well as a picture they took after the new liver went in, which was cool. It is probably the only time you can see what the inside of your body looks like.

I woke up the day after surgery around Noon in ICU - my husband said I struggled a bit earlier when they removed the breathing tube, but thankfully I remember none of it. That afternoon they had me up and walking and I was sent to a step down room early the next morning. I was doing so well that they contemplating sending me home after 4 days, but that morning's blood work showed a sudden decrease in the kidney function that kept me at the hospital for 11 days. I roamed the hallways around the nurse's station a few times each day, which helped me keep sane! Food smells and taste were a problem, so they let my husband bring in food from the outside after one of my surgeons said it was OK - I never ate hospital food after day 2. When I was at the Liver Support Group meeting in Phoenix, I told that story and one of the prior liver recipients commented that they wish they had my doctor! Surgical staples - I had 70 - were removed after 3.5 weeks. I wanted to keep the staples as I plan to include them in an art project when I feel better. After hospital discharge, we stayed at the Residence Inn on the Mayo campus for about 2-3 weeks until I was discharged from the clinic.

Just to make things interesting, my medical coverage changed on January 1 - not my choice as the provider moved everyone to the new plan. When I checked in, I gave them the cards for my then insurance plan as well as the one that would start on the 1st and let them handle it. It caused some confusion with early prescriptions but that resolved eventually. Medicine changes have happened regularly since, keeping hubby on his toes as he prepares my meds. On a positive note, after 1 month of treatment, the HEP-C virus I acquired via the liver transplant is now undetected in my system. I still have 2 more months of treatment followed by 3 more months of testing before they will consider me cured, but I can handle that. I am blessed to have good insurance - the monthly wholesale price of the HEP-C medicine is $13,000 (I only paid $150). We need a better heath care system.

I know I am one of the lucky ones who got a liver transplant - many are not eligible or die while waiting. I am grateful for the care I received from my Tucson GI doctor, Cristiana Bortuzzo, over the past 8 years keeping me healthy and the Mayo team over the last 2 years while on the transplant list. I wish that everyone who has a serious health issue could be cared for at a place like Mayo.

If anyone awaiting liver transplant has any questions, I'll be happy to try and answer them from my perspective.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Transplants Support Group.

@des46893

I am 3 years out on my liver transplant and last months labs were the first time every thing fell into the normal range. After my surgery I asked my post transplant coordinator if she would send me pictures of my old liver. You are dead on in your description of the removed liver. I described mine as looking like a piece of round steak that had been left out on the counter. But as you mentioned I didn’t realize the gall bladder came out also. But this was glaringly evident once I saw the pictures.

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@des46893, I'm doing a happy dance for your normal labs!
I had heard of other liver patients talking about seeing their removed livers but I was too uncomfortable with even thinking about the surgery itself. When I told this to my surgeon, she told me that I just had to show up; she was absolutely correct!
I also did not know about the gall bladder removal until I read about it in my patient portal.
Thank you for sharing. I feel so blessed every day for my transplant and for people like you who are walking the same journey.

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@mickj

@amyintucson Congratulation on the transplant. I was transplanted about 6 months before you in PHX as well (Banner, not Mayo). It's interesting to hear of others' incisions. Mine is around 10-12 inches just on the liver side, essentially a half chevron. And I never had stitches or staples, just glue. 3 weeks post-transplant, I had a hernia repair with about a 6 inch incision. Once again, no stitches or staples, just glue. I wonder why they use stitches/staples in some instances and glue in others.

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Hi, @micki. I had staples for the transplant, and glue for a hernia repair the following year. The glue is so much easier for taking a shower!

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@amyintucson

@mickj -Can you tell me why you chose Banner over Mayo? What kind of follow-up are they doing? How long were you in the hospital? It is interesting to hear how other hospitals treat the same condition.

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@amyintucson My transplant @Banner was driven 100% by my insurance plan. That being said, I have nothing but great things to say about my care with that team, both pre and post transplant. I was in the hospital for 5 days.

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