Showing posts with label Educational. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Educational. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

"The Doctor on call said NO"

I was just sitting here this morning, watching the birds outside my window and drinking my Boost on the rocks. tehehee. Yesterday was my clinic appointment --yup on Valentines day, which I hope you had a lovely one, shared with the ones you love and appreciate!! Most of my day was spent with nurses, but my hubby stayed with me the whole time. Awe. Anywho, my labs haven't changed much, still not good, but they didn't need to admit me! Thank you Jesus!! I will be admitted some time next week though. They are going to up-size my bili-drain again. Ouchieeeee! But, before I forget, (I know I have said it many times before) I wanted to remind you guys that you have to be your own advocate! (and sometimes that demands you to be a little ...ummm, demanding!)

Last month I had to pull myself out of my comfort zone and fight for myself a few times in the hospital, and let me give you a little tip. There is always someone higher on the medical ladder then the person you are talking to. I know I have mentioned nurses that said "ewe" when I threw up and others that left me sit in the bathroom while they went on lunch, and each time I could have done something about it. If you are having a problem with your nurse, try talking to them first. This time I had a nurse that was getting ready to give me my I.V. pain meds but decided to first lecture me on how pain "normally" works, how it grows on their magic pain level scale from a 1 to a 10...how you should ask for the pill form of your pain medication before it gets so bad that you need I.V. form. After a few seconds of this, I quickly stopped her - told her to give me my medicine first please and then explained to her that I in fact have been sick majority of my life and have actually had 6 or 7 surgeries (depending on how you count) and sometimes pain does not climb the number scale at all, but jumps it and hits an "8" full force. Originally I could tell she was irritated with the fact that I had made her go back and get the I.V. med after she had already brought the pill, and was actually a little stuck up sounding while she educated me on pain, but she calmed down after that. Now, sometimes they may not see the errors of their ways, or maybe you just don't like confrontation (which believe me... a few months ago - I would have just bit my tongue and cried after, repeating, noooooo one understands me.)  So if that is the case, NEVER forget about your charge nurse. They are above your nurse and have authority to change your nurse at any time, or they can talk to them for you.

Another issue I had was that my pain seemed worse at night (when my regular doctors were already home sleeping) By then my I.V. pain meds had been discontinued. One night the pain got real bad and I needed some serious pain relief. My nurse called the doctor on call and they said "No" to giving me anything via I.V. so I told my nurse to call them back and tell them that I wanted to talk to them. Within 20 minutes my nurse came back in --not with a phone, but with my meds. The next day when my doctors were making rounds, I let them know what had happened and they spoke with that doctor, letting her know that if I needed it to give it to me... It is not that I am trying to get anyone in trouble (and trust me, that is the first thing out of my mouth each time) but as patients, we have rights, and one of them is to be comfortable... I'm just sayin' :)

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

The Young, The Old, and The Sickies!

Now, don't take this personal... but I am going to reiterate this one more time. IF you are sick with a cold or flu, or have been in the last few weeks, (heck, I don't care if you just think you have allergies) show me the same consideration as you would a newborn babe... and stay away from me! This is a new found phobia for me, but with great reason! I must admit, though it may be the steroids talking, I have very little tolerance for people who do not show great concern for this -- and will make it known. 
A few weeks back, a patient in my transplant clinic came in (wearing a mask) with a woman sniffling and coughing like crazy, she however, was not wearing a mask. This bothered me... greatly. Never mind the huge signs next to a station of hand sanitizer and masks for your convenience that says "COVER YOUR COUGH" (which is actually in all hospitals and just common flippin' curtousy) But she had to have known how easy it is for us transplant patients not to get infections... her husband was wearing a mask for Gods sake. Still she sat down, with us transplant patients watching in terror. (hehehe) and me shaking my head in disgust. (I'm telling you... ROID-RAGE) however, I did nothing but continue to give her the evil eye every time she coughed. That is until she went to the bathroom while her husband went in to see the doctors... she came back and plopped herself right next to me. Her butt had not even hit the chair when I jumped up and grabbed a mask to put on. She at that point got the hint. (I'm guessing) because after at least a half of an hour of being there, and spreading her germs, she got up and got a mask for herself...(I would have loved it if all of us patients would have stood up and cheered) I know, I'm brutal -- and I have never been that way about these things until now.
Now, I know that most people are unaware of how bad certain infections can be to us transplant patients, or that like newborns and elderly our immune systems are so weak... They go around spreading their colds and flues like gumdrops and smiles (don't ask... I don't know where I come up with these things) ... they just don't think about it, know, or maybe even care. But for all my family and friends... (that read this) NOW YOU KNOW!! So remember, because right now, as I type this, it is 3:00 in the morning, and I have just been woken up for the umpteenth time... Why you ask? Because I am in the hospital again, away from my son, costing me money, and exposing me to even more infections. (And that I know because I had left 2 different waiting rooms while waiting for my room today (for 7 hours, but that's a whole other story) due to people coughing, sneezing, and just plain sick looking.) The reason for this hospital stay?? My AST/ALT levels have jumped up this time which could be due to A. rejection, or B. infection... but one of the first things my doctor asked me was. "Have you been around anyone sick" at which point I could have shot myself... or my in-laws. (Just kidding guys. I was very happy to see you, and had a lot of fun) Anywho, not placing any blame here... But they visited us over the holiday weekend from out of town, clearly infected with some bug...  and I'm telling you now again... every single one of you... I love ya's all to pieces, but if you have so much as coughed in the last few weeks, stay away until you are completely better... and if you are at all offended by this... just plain stay away! Ahahahaa. No, really though, even if we don't become deathly ill (which is sadly possible) the slightest infections can cause a rise in our blood work, which sends our doctors and us into panic mode. Even now, knowing that I probably just caught a cold, I am nervous and thinking, what if it's not a cold? Or, what if it is that I am sick, but it is something dangerous for me like CMV or Pneumonia? What if I have to be in here for days or weeks? What do I tell my son?... he worries. And, how long before I get sick of USC's tacos? Which besides their chocolate pudding and apple pie, is the only thing I really like. teheheee. I know... so many things... It's making me sleepy again. (Finally)

Here are a few good pages to read on keeping us patients healthy after transplant... I suggest you read it if you know a transplant patient too (like me) so that you know the do's and don'ts. Some of it is just common sense -- at least for us, but some of it, I hadn't even thought of... Like for us patients that are also parents. Contact your kids school faculty and let them know that you need to be contacted if any communicable diseases are going around. That's a good one.
USC's - Avoiding infection after transplant &
DukeHealth - preventing infection (This one says after lung infection... but I liked it for the examples)

By the way... I googled getting sick after transplant and got over 3million hits... which leads me to believe that this is no laughing matter. Please respect us sickies, and don't take it personal. It's not that we despise you... just what you're carrying. :)

I'm thinking that my next investment is gonna be in one of these bad boys... with a shirt that says "I wear this for my protection... not yours!" ahahaaa.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

All the Medi-cocktails in the Hospital!

 I wanted to post the below articles because no matter how familiar I become with my disease and the symptoms it can cause, I do not know much. Because my heart rate kept dropping well below the hundreds and I was becoming weaker and weaker this last time in the ER, the doctor prescribed me a Nitroglycerin pill for my heart. What they didn't explain was just how much it can scare someone who never even knew such a drug and its effects existed.
My point... know as much as you can, and definitely know YOURSELF. Every time I go in there vomiting they want to give me Zofran, and though it may work for 90% of the population, it doesn't work for me... Keep track of what they give you... they are telling you for a reason when they pump it in you... The second article is just a reminder.... seriously, overdosing with zofran, pain meds, pepcid and whatever else they decide to add to your medi-cocktail may not be a great idea... My papa was so constipated his last hospital stay and they kept wanting to give him more drugs to fix the constipation the other drugs caused... NO MORE, he said! And one of his doctors finally gave him some Epsom, and like Emeril says....BAM!! ...ok, that's not a good quote at a time like this, but you get the point.

In Surgery: Knowing what you can.

Jennifer Heisler, RN, is a registered nurse who has worked in the areas of surgery, transplantation and home health care.
Experience:
As a member of a hospital surgical intensive care unit (ICU), Jennifer helped critically ill patients prepare for and recover from surgery. She educated family members and loved ones about the intricacies of patients' conditions and care, putting what she calls "surgeon speak" into easier to understand terms. During her time as an ICU team member, Jennifer also provided nursing care in in-home settings.
Today, Jennifer is an ICU organ procurement coordinator. She manages critical organ donors prior to surgery, monitoring ventilator settings, medications and fluids. Jennifer also identifies organ donation recipients who are on waiting lists and provides support and information to family members whose loved ones are about to donate organs. She works in both ICU and operating room settings.
Education:
Jennifer earned an associate degree in nursing from Central Ohio Technical College.
From Jennifer Heisler, RN:
My experience as a nurse has taught me one very important lesson -- knowing as much as you possibly can before having surgery is the only way to make the right decisions for your health and well-being. The decision to have surgery is a big one, and I hope you will use the information I've provided here to take great care of yourself.

n Surgery: Dealing With Pain After Surgery

Tuesday February 17, 2009
I've noticed something about people in pain after surgery that I find rather interesting. All of the normal things we do when we are normally in pain go out of the window. You know what I mean by normal pain; the headaches, muscle aches, cramps and other small pains that plague us on occasion. What do you do for the normal pain in your life? Do you take a few ibuprofen or Tylenol? Do you find a warm compress or a cold compress and put it to work? What doesn't work for your pain? I ask because if Aleve doesn't work for you for normal pain, the likelihood that prescription strength Aleve will work isn't so good.
So, if you are reading this because you're having some post surgery pain, I will first ask did you take the medications that were prescribed for you? If so, great. If not, seriously consider it! Not in so much pain that you need the strong stuff, but you still could use something? It is time to try out those things you do when you haven't had surgery.
Words of warning: make sure you are not double dosing yourself. If your prescription medication contains Tylenol (acetaminophen) don't take more in the form of over the counter meds. This goes for ibuprofen and other medications too. If you are going to use a hot or cold compress, do not apply it directly to your skin. The skin around an incision typically does not have the sensitivity it normally would and you can easily burn or well, freezer burn yourself, for lack of a better term. Seriously.
Let me know if this helps you!
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Friday, October 2, 2009

Costs of Transplant and After-care

The cost for a liver transplant surgery starts at about $500,000."

Liver transplant
http://www.enlmedical.com/article/003006.htm

ENLMedical separates transplant costs into five parts:

"Surgery charges can be separated into five parts: 1) the surgeon's
fee, 2) the anesthesiologist's fee, 3) the hospital charges, which
includes nursing care and the operating room, 4) the medications, and
5) additional charges.

1. Surgeon's fee: variable
2. Anesthesiologist's fee: averages $350 to $400 per hour
3. Hospital charges: basic rate averages $1,500 to $1,800 per day
(more for the intensive care unit (ICU) or private rooms)
4. Medication charges: $200 to $400
5. Additional charges: assisting surgeon, treatment of complications,
diagnostic procedures (such as blood or X-ray exams), medical
supplies, or equipment use."

Liver transplant
http://www.enlmedical.com/article/003006.htm

------------------------A F T E R * C A R E * C O S T S--------------------------

Anti-rejection medications, which the patient will require for the
rest of his life, are not included in this figure. Such expenses can
reach more than $21,000 annually:

"According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), estimated
charges for liver transplantation are:

Estimated First-Year Charge (1996 dollars): $314,600
Estimated Annual Follow-up Charge (1996 dollars): $21,900

Following your transplant, you will need several drugs, called
immunosuppresives, to sustain your transplanted liver. The
immunosuppressive medications may include Neoral, Cellcept, Prograf
and Prednisone. The following are estimates and depend on the dosage
and pharmacy used. Note that most health plans pay a percentage of
medication costs, as described in the next section.
# Neoral or Prograf: Total monthly cost is approximately $1,200
# Cellcept: Total monthly cost is approximately $800 (required for
first three months only)
# Prograf: Total monthly cost is approximately $1,077
# Prednisone: Total monthly cost is approximately $12
# Acyclovir or or Cytovene: Total monthly cost is $100-$1,500
(required for first two to three months only)
# Nystatin: Total monthly cost is approximately $200 (required for
first three months only)
# Prilosec: Total monthly cost is approximately $300 (required for
first three months only)"

Transplantation costs
http://www.cpmc.org/advanced/liver/patients/topics/finance.html#Transplantation%20Costs

The National Transplant Assistance Fund provides the following
breakdown for charges billed in the first year after a liver
transplant:

Evaluation: $16,100
Candidacy (per month): $9,600
Organ Procurement: $26,900
Hospital: $121,600
Physician: $32,500
Follow-up: $48,400
Immunosuppressants: $12,800
==========
TOTAL: $267,900

Average Estimated Charges Billed During First Year Following
Transplantation
http://www.transplantfund.org/homepage2.html


As with any surgery, recovery times vary from patient to patient,
based largely on the patient's age, how sick they were prior to
surgery, and how complicated the surgery ended up being. Tufts-New
England Medical Center puts the average hospital stay for liver
transplantation at about three weeks:

"The length of hospital stay after surgery largely depends on a
recipient's condition prior to transplant, but is typically three
weeks. Individual patients' circumstances differ after liver
transplantation, so during their final few days in the hospital,
Tufts-NEMC's transplantation team devises a customized outpatient
program for each patient.

Liver Transplantation
http://www.nemc.org/surgery/html/trnsplnt/tpliver.htm

A study published in the Southern Medical Journal puts the median
hospital stay for transplant receipients between 10 and 20 days:

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Hepatic Encephalopathy

MedlinePlus
Hepatic encephalopathy

Hepatic encephalopathy is brain and nervous system damage that occurs as a complication of liver disorders.

  • Agitation
  • Changes in mental state, consciousness, behavior, personality
    • Changes in mood
    • Coma
    • Confusion, disorientation
    • Decreased alertness, daytime sleepiness
    • Decreased responsiveness
    • Delirium
    • Dementia
    • Forgetfulness
  • Deterioration of handwriting or loss of other small hand movements
  • Dysfunctional movement
  • Muscle stiffness
  • Muscle tremors
  • Seizures (rare)
  • Speech impairment
  • Uncontrollable movement

Patients with hepatic encephalopathy are often not able to care for themselves because of these symptoms.

Hepatic encephalopathy may become a medical emergency. Hospitalization is required.

The first step is to identify and treat any factors that may have caused hepatic encephalopathy.

Gastrointestinal bleeding must be stopped. The intestines must be emptied of blood. Infections, kidney failure, and electrolyte abnormalities (especially potassium) need to be treated.

Life support may be necessary to help with breathing or blood circulation, particularly if the person is in a coma. The brain may swell, which can be life-threatening.

Patients with severe, repeated cases of encephalopathy may be told to reduce protein in the diet to lower ammonia production. However, dietary counseling is important, because too little protein in the diet may cause malnutrition. Critically ill patients may need specially formulated intravenous or tube feedings.

Lactulose may be given to prevent intestinal bacteria from creating ammonia, and as a laxative to remove blood from the intestines. Neomycin may also be used to reduce ammonia production by intestinal bacteria. Rifaximin, a new antibiotic, is also effective in hepatic encephalopathy.

Sedatives, tranquilizers, and any other medications that are broken down or released by the liver should be avoided if possible. Medications containing ammonium (including certain antacids) should also be avoided. Other medications and treatments may be recommended. They may have varying results.

Hepatic encephalopathy is caused by disorders that affect the liver. These include disorders that reduce liver function (such as cirrhosis or hepatitis) and conditions in which blood circulation does not enter the liver. The exact cause of hepatic encephalopathy is unknown.

An important job of the liver is to change toxic substances that are either made by the body or taken into the body (such as medicines) and make them harmless. However, when the liver is damaged, these "poisons" may build up in the bloodstream.

Ammonia, which is produced by the body when proteins are digested, is one of the harmful substances that is normally made harmless by the liver. Many other substances may also build up in the body if the liver is not working well. They can cause damage to the nervous system.

Hepatic encephalopathy may occur suddenly in people who previously had no liver problems when damage occurs to the liver. More often, the condition is seen in people with chronic liver disease.

Hepatic encephalopathy may be triggered by:

  • Any condition that causes alkalosis
  • Dehydration
  • Eating too much protein
  • Electrolyte abnormalities (especially a decrease in potassium) from vomiting, or from treatments such as paracentesis or taking diuretics ("water pills")
  • Gastrointestinal bleeding
  • Infections
  • Kidney problems
  • Low oxygen levels in the body
  • Shunt placement or complications
  • Surgery
  • Use of medications that suppress the central nervous system (such as barbiturates or benzodiazepine tranquilizers)

Disorders that can mimic or mask symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy include:

Hepatic encephalopathy may occur as an acute, potentially reversible disorder. Or it may occur as a chronic, progressive disorder that is associated with chronic liver disease.

Nervous system signs may change. Signs include:

  • Coarse, "flapping" shaking of the hands when attempting to hold the arms out in front of the body and lift the hands
  • Abnormal mental status, particularly cognitive (thinking) tasks such as connecting numbers with lines
  • Signs of liver disease, such as yellow skin and eyes (jaundice) and fluid collection in the abdomen (ascites), and occasionally a musty odor to the breath and urine

Tests may include:

  • Blood chemistry
  • CT scan of the head or MRI
  • EEG
  • Prothrombin time
  • Serum ammonia levels

Acute hepatic encephalopathy may be treatable. Chronic forms of the disorder often keep getting worse or continue to come back.

Both forms may result in irreversible coma and death. Approximately 80% (8 out of 10 patients) die if they go into a coma. Recovery and the risk of the condition returning vary from patient to patient.

Treating liver disorders may prevent some cases of hepatic encephalopathy. Avoiding heavy drinking and intravenous drug use can prevent many liver disorders.

If there are any nervous system symptoms in a person with known or suspected liver disease, call for immediate medical attention.

  • Brain herniation
  • Brain swelling
  • Increased risk of:
  • Permanent nervous system damage (to movement, sensation, or mental state)
  • Progressive, irreversible coma
  • Side effects of medications

Call your health care provider if any change in mental state or other nervous system problem occurs, particularly if there is a known or suspected liver disorder. Hepatic encephalopathy can rapidly get worse and become an emergency condition.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Is a living liver donation worth the risk?

Is a living liver donation worth the risk?
Sunday, August 09, 2009

Liver transplants from living donors had already been losing momentum around the nation by the time UPMC transplant pioneer Thomas Starzl weighed in on the topic recently.

But as the first doctor in the world to perform a liver transplant, his critical perspective on 121 of those transplants at UPMC between 2003 and 2006, which revealed a high complication rate, is certain to ramp up the debate among transplant physicians and ethicists on this controversial procedure.

The recent study looked at the period when living donor operations surged at UPMC under the leadership of Dr. Amadeo Marcos, who was forced to resign last year amid sexual misconduct allegations.

That rapid increase was an anomaly in the United States, where the operation has been declining since 2001.

Living donor liver transplants peaked nationally at 524 in 2001, when they comprised 10 percent of all liver transplants. By last year, they had dropped to 249, and accounted for just 4 percent of liver transplants.

That's a marked contrast to living donor kidney transplants, which now make up nearly a third of all kidney transplants in America. Living kidney operations not only are safer to perform than living liver transplants, but live-donor kidneys function significantly better than deceased donor kidneys do.

At UPMC, the number of living donor liver transplants has plummeted since Dr. Marcos left, from more than 30 a year at his peak to just four last year.

UPMC spokesman Paul Wood said last week that the dwindling number of living donor transplants does not reflect any change in policy, but simply the fact that "when you have a world-famous surgeon like Dr. Marcos who was a pioneer in living donor liver transplants, and he leaves, a decrease in numbers is a natural consequence of that."

He said neither Dr. J. Wallis Marsh, lead author of the Journal of Hepatology study that also included Dr. Starzl and two others, nor Dr. Abhinav Humar, new chief of transplantation, wished to comment for this article. Dr. Starzl also declined comment.

At the national level, there are at least three reasons living donor surgeries have declined, according to a report last year by Dr. James Trotter, medical director of liver transplantation at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.

The first is what he called the "front-loading" effect, meaning that the best matches between donors and recipients were done early in the process, after adult-to-adult liver transplants began 10 years ago.

The second is that thanks to a concerted national effort to increase organ donations, the number of deceased donor transplants increased by nearly 30 percent between 2001 and last year, to 6,070 transplants.

Finally, he wrote, doctors began to realize that the results of living donor transplants were not quite as good as they had originally thought.

Initially, they touted the fact that the survival of living donor patients was better than those who got cadaver organs. But that was influenced by the fact that most people getting living donor transplants were much healthier than those getting cadaver organs, largely because national policies dictate that deceased donor organs go to the sickest patients on the waiting list.

Still, some experts feel that correlating the survival of those who get live organs with those who get cadaver organs is the wrong comparison to make.

"The fundamental choice patients are making is not a living donor organ vs. a deceased donor organ; they're deciding between a living donor transplant today vs. staying on the waiting list with the potential for getting an organ in the future," said Dr. Robert Brown, medical director of the Center for Liver Disease and Transplantation at New York Presbyterian/Columbia.

And for now, Dr. Brown said, the chance of people dying while on the liver transplant waiting list is greater than 20 percent, while the chance of dying after a transplant is less than 10 percent after one year. "So the real question is, 'What risk should a donor take in order to get the recipient off the waiting list sooner?' "

While the Starzl and Marsh study criticized several aspects of living donor transplants, including the fact that they subject healthy donors to a risky surgery, it didn't call for abandoning the operation altogether.

That's also the position of Dr. Goran Klintmalm, a longtime liver transplant surgeon at the Baylor Regional Transplant Institute and past president of the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.

"I have been quite public in saying that, to me, you have to have a really good reason before you expose a healthy human being to the risks that are entailed in living donation," Dr. Klintmalm said. "In kidney transplantation, the risks are very small if done correctly. In liver transplantation, just as Tom [Starzl] brings up, the question is, when is the risk to the donor so high that you have a hard time justifying it?

"I don't think there is an easy straightforward answer to that because I don't think we as a society have really figured out what the risk and benefit balance is."

One key, he said, is to find potential recipients who are neither too sick nor too healthy.

Liver disease patients who are very sick don't do well with any kind of transplant, he said, but have an especially tough time if they get a living donation. Since living donor patients are only getting about 40 percent to 60 percent of the donor's liver, there sometimes isn't enough tissue to overcome the shock of transplant surgery, Dr. Klintmalm said.

On the other end of the scale, studies have shown that for relatively healthy liver patients, the risk of surgery is a greater threat to their lives than waiting until they are sicker.

To determine how sick a patient is, liver specialists use a national rating system called MELD -- Model for End Stage Liver Disease -- which ranges from 6, for very healthy, to 40, for extremely ill.

Most living donor programs have now agreed it is too risky to transplant any patient with a MELD of less than 15, even though at UPMC, 70 percent of the patients transplanted by the Marcos team had MELD scores of 15 or less.

In his view, Dr. Klintmalm said, "somewhere between a MELD of 15 and 28 is the ideal window" for living donor transplants.

Even with healthy recipients, though, there is the issue of complications. The Starzl and Marsh study said that 66 percent of living donor liver recipients at UPMC suffered serious postoperative complications.

That was more than twice the rate cited in a study of nine top living donor programs across the nation, although UPMC's Mr. Wood said that "we believe it is possible the complications at other centers may have been underreported. We believe our researchers used a more rigorous system and more rigorously applied the criteria" to track postoperative problems.

If that is true, though, it would mean that more than half of all living donor recipients in America may suffer potentially life threatening complications.

Dr. Satoru Todo, a liver transplant surgeon at the Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine in Japan, said in an e-mail interview that living donor transplants are a challenging type of surgery.

"It is a technically demanding surgery," Dr. Todo said, "and is complicated by such postoperative problems" as clots in the liver's main artery, bleeding, retention of fluid in the abdomen and narrowing or blockage of the bile duct.

Even so, Asian centers have reported much lower complication rates than American hospitals for living donor liver transplants.

Dr. Todo said Asians have a high incidence of liver cancer, so surgeons there are very experienced with liver operations. There is also a cultural prejudice in Asia against donating organs at death, which means that Asian surgeons have few chances to use cadaver organs as a fallback.

Most experts see a future for living donor liver transplants, but it's unclear whether they will regain a bigger share of transplants.

In parts of the United States or the world where there is a good supply of cadaver organs, "the rule should be if we don't absolutely need to do living donor transplants, we should never do them," said Dr. Ronald Busuttil, chief of liver and pancreas transplantation at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles.

Worldwide, there probably have been more than 30 deaths of donors during this procedure, he estimated, and "that is very much on the minds of most transplant surgeons around the country. We're very reluctant to subject our patients to a living donor transplant."

One important lesson from the Starzl and Marsh study, Baylor's Dr. Klintmalm said, is that it "brings out the whole issue that we need to be careful and not just charge ahead and let cowboys do this [operation]. It has to be done by people with honesty and respect for life and people."

But Columbia's Dr. Brown also pleaded for empathy with donors who want to help people they love. "If you want to respect donor autonomy, you would allow them to take much greater risks than any [liver specialist] would allow them to. I think it's clear donors would take a higher risk for someone they really cared about than medical practitioners are willing to do."

Mark Roth can be reached at mroth@post-gazette.com or at 412-263-1130.
First published on August 9, 2009 at 12:00 am

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Liver Lover Quiz

Look at what I made....I think that the info is correct (Just kidding...it is) lol
It was late and I couldn't sleep so don't hurt my feelings -- Click below

Chopped Liver or Liver Lover - quiz created by Ricki

Please take the quiz and post your results in the comments -- if you dare. (cough cough)...now.