What to expect going into a transplant consult?
Hello,
My father is starting the process of being placed on the transplant list. I am one of his caregivers and will be going to a consult with him and my mother, his other caregiver. I would love to know what I need to prepare for before going to the consult. What history of mine will they need if any? Are they just making sure we (mom and myself) know what to expect when he goes through successful transplant? Allowing space for us to ask questions and better understand? I would love any insight you may have. Thank you!
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Hi Rosemary!
Thank you for sharing a little of your history.
I had my first liver transplant in January 2008 which failed due to ischemia. The transplanted liver was damaged. I fell into a coma and all of my organs started to fail. In February, a match was found but by that time, I needed a liver and a kidney. It was a long recovery period in UCLA. If my son hadn’t been so persistent every day, I may not have had the same outcome. CAREGIVERS are soo important. I have no memory as I was in a coma but my doctors told me alll about it 😇
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I'm 68 years old and had a living donor liver transplant 2 years and 4 months ago at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. My daughter donated 64.2% of her liver to me and it was not a bad experience for us. We were out of the hospital in 1 week and were released in 3 weeks. I had no other medical problems. Today I am as healthy as anyone I know and live my life like I was never sick. I was never afraid of death but truly enjoy my chance to continue living, no reason to get a transplant and stop enjoying your life.
The advantage of a living donor is the timing of the transplant, you can schedule the procedure.
southcarolina | @southcarolina | 1 second ago
In reply to @kim1965 "@jamesduaiswamy My wife is in need of a liver transplant more than likely this coming summer...." + (show)
I'm 68 years old and had a living donor liver transplant 2 years and 4 months ago at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. My daughter donated 64.2% of her liver to me and it was not a bad experience for us. We were out of the hospital in 1 week and were released in 3 weeks. I had no other medical problems. Today I am as healthy as anyone I know and live my life like I was never sick. I was never afraid of death but truly enjoy my chance to continue living, no reason to get a transplant and stop enjoying your life.
The advantage of a living donor is the timing of the transplant, you can schedule the procedure.
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