Here is an amazing story about Hannah Clark, a 16-year-old with a
shy laugh and a love of animals and babies. She likes to go shopping
with friends and dreams of a career working with children. But Hannah Clark is no ordinary teenager and her normal life today could
not have been possible without a unique, life-changing heart surgery.
But Hannah was not in the clear yet. As with any organ transplant,
Hannah’s body was likely to reject her new heart and she had to take
powerful immune suppression drugs. Those drugs allowed her body to accept the donor heart but also led
to cancer and yet another medical battle for Hannah that lasted for
years.
Nearly 11 years after receiving the extra heart, there was more
bad news: The immuno-suppression drugs were no longer working. Hannah’s
body was rejecting the donor heart. In February 2006, her doctors tried something that had never been
done before: They took out the donor heart. Doctors theorized that the
donor heart had allowed Hannah’s heart to rest, recover and grow back
stronger.
Now for the first time Hannah’s father, Paul Clark, describes
the agonizing decision the family had to make at the time: “If she’d
never had it done, she wouldn’t be here. In the very beginning it was a 50/50 chance she wasn’t going to make
the operation. But in the next one it was even greater because it had
never been done before. But we had to take that risk,” he told CNN. The
doctors were right. Three years later, Hannah has no need for any
drugs and has been given a clean bill of health. The operation was a
success.
“It means everything to me,” Hannah told CNN after the pioneering
operation. “I thought I’d still have problems when I had this operation
done. I thought after the heart had been removed I thought I’d have to
visit hospitals. But now I’m just free,” she said, smiling. Dr. Magdi
Yacoub performed Hannah’s original transplant and came out of retirement
to perform the second.
“The possibility of recovery of the heart is just like magic.” Dr.
Yacoub said at a media conference. “[We had] a heart which was not
contracting at all at the time. We put the new heart to be pumping next
to it and take its work, now [it] is functioning normally.” The findings have been published in the British medical journal, this
seems like a true miracle.
I am curious how the old heart was able to
still beat, because you think as a muscle that was not being used it
would have went into atrophy.
Source : http://www.epicweird.com
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