Another Breath
( An account of one
man’s journey among the healing arts and a vital organ transplant)
It was in the heat of the summer that my world took a sudden
turn. I prepared for a trip to Istanbul and the east of Europe. Prior to leaving, my family urged me to take
care of some troublesome problems with breathing and swelling in my lower limbs.
I resisted, as usual, until I could not. I was slowly falling into a state of
dysfunction that seemed like an aggravated case of so many little things that
had crept into my physical state over the years. I simply never gave in and
they went away.
Photo in Kyiv, Ukraine Independence Day
The Long Road to the back of the line
I was hospitalized for a week for evaluation in late August;
I spent my birthday there. My first time in a hospital. Instead of the jet to
crosscurrent of Asia and Europe, I was in a hospital bed with constant pokes
and examinations.
Doctors assess and recommend. Often, there were conflicting
opinions and opposite suggestions. By
faith and divination, it all seemed to coalesce into risk parameters.
Some things can be done now that cannot be done later. Some courses carry a
risk of failure despite meeting every medical mark. This situation had no
positive side simply a reckoning of risks and probabilities. There were calls
from the heart to the heavens.
Warming to the Transplant
Of all the options, that which seemed least appealing was
the drastic step of replacing my compromised lungs through a transplant. It is
more common than I’d realized, and more difficult to get than I had imagined.
But in saying yes to considering this option, I chose the Henry Ford Institute
and submitted an application for the procedure.
Even in so doing, I did not feel that sick; I did not agree that my
situation was so drastic. I had to use
oxygen tanks to provide better breathing. At first, I used very little and often
none at all. Then in a mere matter of
weeks, I used increasingly to the point that exertion was difficult and require
many liters of oxygen flow. A gradual realization grew that I had to find a
long-term solution or the path of my life would be decidedly downhill.
The transplant suggested earlier seemed more welcome; yet,
it was not guaranteed. The sudden realization came into a concrete form when I considered
that I would have to pass a rigorous, month-long assessment. Then, if I passed
the top-to-bottom assessment, my reward was a place at the end of a very long
line. There are far more in need of transplants than the supply of donated
organs. I thought with some pride that I am a registered donor.
Counting the freckles
To say the assessment was rigorous would be a disservice. It
took many weeks and involved teams of medical personnel and experts. By the
end, I felt that they could tell me the number of freckles on my back. The end
of the assessment did not really come, it seemed more like it petered out. I
got a phone call and had a meeting that informed of the positive outcome of the
assessment. I was a qualified candidate.
Now, to the Back of the Line
Transplants have a selection protocol based on the
individual’s need for action. However, in reality, there is far more chance
than suggested. Some things offer advantages such as being tall or short,
living in a major metropolitan area, and the odd chance of things like blood
types and chemical factors. I got the news on a Saturday, that my name had been
posted to the transplant list for a lung transplant. I expected to be there for
a number of months and an indefinite waiting period. I planned to explore other ways to improve my
condition; I was to diet, exercise, and get stronger for starts.
An Odd Way to End the Next Day
Sunday was a day to relax; I had completed the assessment.
The long wait had begun. I relaxed
mentally, in a certainty that I would do all I could to heal and get stronger.
Then, the phone rang.
It was the institute coordinator and he asked “ when did you
last eat?”
I was in a mental swirl but somehow managed to recall two hours
earlier a sandwich.
“We have a lung for you.”
“ You have to come in, can you get here within the next 45
minutes?”
One Day Wonder
I spent the next hour in a mental uproar and managed somehow
to look calm. I arranged my support system- my incredibly supportive daughter-
and packed my bags. I was at the Henry
Ford Hospital within an hour of the call, admitted and being prepped for
surgery. Some things suggest luck or good fortune; other things suggest the hand
of Providence. One day on the waiting list, well, it seemed then to now as slightly
miraculous. It is what I was taught to believe was a blessing.
Arduous Process and then breath…
In two short days, I was transformed from someone needing an
oxygen tank to walk to the corner, to someone breathing with ease and with the highest
possible oxygenation. Medicine too has its miracles and it can provide
blessings. The impressive skills and dedication of the Henry Ford Hospital
Transplant Institute team was on a remarkable display in my case. It involved surgical
experts, multidisciplinary approaches, medications, and a complex balancing to keep
a transplanted organ from rejection.
I must remark on the exceptional skills and knowledge displayed by the nursing and technical staff in the Intensive Care Unit. I was a helpless mess for about two days and recovered quickly thereafter. These dedicated staff were a big part of the reason for my rapid improvement. They cared for me, taught me, and encouraged every effort at progress. They were somewhat amazing, the grasp and facility of working with so much technical equipment and technical information.
I must remark on the exceptional skills and knowledge displayed by the nursing and technical staff in the Intensive Care Unit. I was a helpless mess for about two days and recovered quickly thereafter. These dedicated staff were a big part of the reason for my rapid improvement. They cared for me, taught me, and encouraged every effort at progress. They were somewhat amazing, the grasp and facility of working with so much technical equipment and technical information.
I owe a great deal to those skilled team members, and I owe
thanks to so many who watched and prayed for me. This includes my family in the
US and my dear ones in the Ukraine. But standing out above all, I will not
understand the devotion of my child. She worked tirelessly and with personal sacrifice. There is much about goodness that cannot be
understood. Sometimes, we can only stand and watch it unfold, blossom into
being like a flower in the arid sands.
Acknowledgements: The Henry Ford Hospital Transplant Institute, Dr. Lisa Allenspach, Dr. Lisa Stagner,
Dr. Borgi ( surgeon), Dr. Pinto, and the
entire Transplant team with special mention to Aron Zdanowski and Nurse Rachel Henderson.
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