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Eight-organ transplant baby has a fighting chance

Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2004 11:50 am
by lovechild
MIAMI (March 19) - Wearing a pink dress, a baby who received eight new organs in a single transplant operation cried and cooed Friday as her mother held her in her arms and saw a brighter future for her daughter.

"Her biggest feeling is happiness," said a doctor interpreting for Monica di Matteo, 39, mother of 7 1/2-month-old Alessia di Matteo of Genoa, Italy.

The operation took place seven weeks ago but was not announced until Thursday. Mother and baby appeared at a news conference on Friday, and di Matteo said she was "hoping for a normal life" for Alessia.

The baby was born with smooth muscle disorder, which prevented normal function of her stomach, intestines and kidneys. The condition is fatal if left untreated.

She underwent an operation at Jackson Memorial Hospital in which she received a new liver, stomach, pancreas, small intestine, large intestine, spleen and two kidneys. The organs were all taken from the same 7-month-old donor and transplanted as a unit, said Dr. Andreas Tzakis, the lead surgeon.

Doctors at Jackson Memorial said the surgery was the world's first eight-organ transplant. But other officials have said it is difficult to say if the hospital had set a record because other facilities record the stomach and intestine as one organ.

The 12-hour operation Jan. 31 was performed in a space in the girl's abdomen about the size of three fists, and the organs transplanted weighed less than 11 ounces, Tzakis said. Alessia was 6 months old at the time.

She is expected to remain in Miami several more weeks for observation. The risks include infection and organ rejection.

"We are not at ease at all about the baby's condition and we're going to be quite nervous for the first year," Tzakis said.

The hospital is one of the leading centers for multi-organ operations, having done nearly 100 in the past 10 years, Tzakis said. More than 80 percent of patients survive the first year after the surgery, he said.

Before the transplants, Alessia was hospital-bound with multiple infections, Tzakis said.

There was a problem with tissue rejection after the surgery, but doctors were able to get the complication under control.

Alessia now weighs about 13 pounds and is fed through a tube, but is out of the intensive care unit. Doctors are monitoring her intestines, which are most likely to develop infections.

Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2004 3:54 pm
by Mother Mo
Wow, poor babies. I hope the little one does well. Bless those poor parents of the donor child. What an unenviable task to be given.

Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2004 11:15 am
by feline
Our cousins daughter, Christin,who was born severely handicapped 16 years ago and is on a 2-3 year old age level,just had major back surgery using donor organs last week.She is doing well so far. It is a hard decision to make, but it shows just how important being a donor is. If it was your own child needing surgery, you would be hoping that someone was kind enough to donate organs of their deceased loved ones.

Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2004 2:14 pm
by Mother Mo
Absolutely. I'm an organ donor myself. Why not? By the time they are available, I certainly won't have any use for them.
People who donate to the body farm get much respect from me, too. At least with organ donation, you still get to bury the shell. What type of funeral is done for the ones who donate the entire vessel?

Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2004 2:44 pm
by lovechild
i also wish to be an organ donor, but i also plan to be cremated which brings the point of why throw my organs away if im just going to be dust?

Posted: Sun Mar 21, 2004 3:01 pm
by Mother Mo
Allow your organs to be harvested, then the rest of your remains can be cremated. Be advised, though that cremation is actually more expensive than standard burial. The funeral homes charge you for every nickle or dime they can get out of you. It's also best to make your arrangements way before you expect to need them. They take extra advantage of the loved ones of those who don't.