Transplant: No or Few Antibodies after COVID Vaccination
My daughter received a kidney from her father 15 months ago. She is participating in the Johns Hopkins study of transplant patients undergoing vaccination. The study required that she be tested for antibodies just before she received her second shot. The test results showed that she had no antibodies to Covid-19. I wonder if anyone else on this list is participating in the Hopkins study and can share their experience. I know the study will be asking participants to repeat the antibody test four of five more times over the year after being fully vaccinated. Thank you
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@athenalee Congratulations on your liver transplant too. I hope my Tacrolimus will be reduced eventually. Thank you for the tip on taking Biotin and applying argan oil. I will ask my nephrologist if it’s safe for me to take Biotin.
I’m definitely interested in the transplant culinary arts discussion and will attend the sessions.
I always love how friends give such helpful advice, here are a few of my favorites: there are yoga poses that will correct kidney failure, this supplement improves kidney health, try drinking more water. I know they mean well, but I think I’ll just listen to my Mayo transplant team. My favorite these days are all the people who say don’t worry, I’m vaccinated and very careful. Really? I just saw picture on Facebook of you at an indoor concert, jam packed with no mask on! I’ll just keep to myself, thanks.
By the way, I lost a lot of hair for about a year after my transplant, but eventually it all came back. Wish I’d known about Biotin!
LOL. Yes the helpful advice we get from well meaning friends. *sarcasm alert* Had I only known the miraculous benefits of drinking raw asparagus juice 4 time daily and using essential oils I could have been spared from my Acute Myeloid Leukemia and months of suffering from chemo and a stem cell transplant. Giggle.
You’re doing great, Molly…stick with the program and your team from Mayo. They steer us right, every time! ☺️
To my dear fellow transplant patients,
I have been absent for a couple of weeks, and as I am getting caught up with all that I have missed, I decided that with so many newly transplanted individuals that it is time to revisit some of our past(Pre Covid19) discussions. Here is a Transplant Discussion where I asked members to share ideas about how they ‘live’ after transplant. I think that you will find some great tips that apply to all of us transplant patients.
Living Life after your Transplant
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/living-life-after-your-transplant/
@jackie421blfdgurl, @leahdrose, @mollyv, @loribmt, @contentandwell, @hello1234, @athenalee, @nanmargaret, @millds, @diana61, @tjdog, @joko, @barbtc, @sueatt, and all transplant patients, caregivers, and loved ones -
I invite you to start at the beginning (2016) and enjoy - as you meet and learn from others who have shared their expert tips. We are never alone, and we are here to support each other. Of course, as always - Please share your thoughts to the discussion. You are the new generation of transplant recipients who are becoming "experts with living safely during the Covid19 era"!
Thanks for sharing these messages. I had my kidney transplant in 1987 (April 30th) at U Wisconsin Madison. Leading patient education was a nurse named Joann Nett who had an enormous impact on my entire perspective on health care and well-being. She taught me/us to be our own patient advocate. To never settle for pat answers and to always question medical personnel, sometimes harshly if necessary, to get an acceptable answer. That was the most important lesson. I was less focused on germs and CMV than rejection. I knew the rejection signs and every ache had to be my kidney rejecting. That lasted for 6 months. After that, I have always lived life like anyone else. However I exercised at a health club religiously, watched my food, drink and medications. I am the most compliant patient when it comes to medicine and diet. I traveled extensively in my job. All over the world and enjoyed it enormously. I still do. However Covid19 has made me super vigilant. I've become paranoid about people without masks and angry about people who do not get vaccinated. (I know. I know. I've read all these postings about people with Post-Covid diseases etc. etc.) This includes family members. I understand from friends that this is a common challenge. I wash my hands and avoid crowds as others have mentioned. But I'll be damned if I'm going to be a recluse. I've gotten back into groups and workouts at the Y. But I'm only doing small groups that are far apart. I hate virtual and Zoom. I've taught classes on Zoom and never will again. It is so detached. Bloodless. All of us need the social connection with family and friends. I pray that we solve this pandemic soon so that we can all live as carelessly as we once did. (My definition of careless is quite different than other people.) I wish everyone well. Each of us has to find our own path. It is never easy with chronic diseases.
@joko, Would you share (copy/paste) this response in the discussion Living Life after your Transplant?
@gingerw I sure hope my antibodies were increased with the booster. I feel like I am constantly living in limbo.
JK
Of course. I'll do that.
Congratulations on your transplant! I am 4 years out and had my third dose of Moderna as soon as I was allowed.No antibodies on first two but I did have the spike protein test for antibodies and did have a result of >250. While that is of some comfort, we don't know what that means or what protection it affords someone on immunosuppressants. Flu shot will come next week.I have worn a mask at the beginning of flu season and gotten a flu shot every year. I wore a mask in crowded environments. I haven't been ill in 4 years. My entire family is vaccinated with the exception of the 3 small grandchildren. We all wear masks, social distance, wash hands and follow safety protocol. We will continue to do so in order to protect the special gifts I have been given. You are wise to stay home. You have good instincts. When in doubt, talk to your team.
Good to check. It doesn’t interact with Tacrolimus anyway, but I learned from my endocrinologist that it interferes with certain blood tests, including TSH for thyroid monitoring. So, if I’m doing any labs, I stop taking all B vitamins at least fives days before.