A Chicago woman received a double lung transplant after a bout with
coronavirus wreaked damage on the organs, the hospital announced
Thursday.
The patient, a Hispanic woman in her 20s, was on a ventilator and
heart-lung machine for six weeks before her life-saving operation
Friday, according to Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
The woman had been otherwise in pretty healthy shape, but her health
rapidly deteriorated when she was hospitalized in late April with the
virus, doctors said.
“For many days, she was the sickest person in the COVID ICU – and
possibly the entire hospital,” said Dr. Beth Malsin, a pulmonary and
critical care specialist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in a
statement.
“There were so many times, day and night, our team had to react
quickly to help her oxygenation and support her other organs to make
sure they were healthy enough to support a transplant if and when the
opportunity came.”
Dr. Ankit Bharat, who performed the operation, said they waited six
weeks for her to recover from the virus before considering a transplant.
She was moved to the top of the transplant list because she was in
bad shape, with signs that her heart, kidneys and liver were beginning
to fail, he said.
Bharat said the 10-hour procedure was still challenging since the
virus left her lungs with holes and nearly fused to the chest wall.
“We want other transplant centers to know that while the transplant
procedure in these patients is quite technically challenging, it can be
done safely, and it offers the terminally ill COVID-19 patients another
option for survival,” Bharat said in a statement.
The operation was successful but doctors say they will still keep her ventilator and heart-lung machine as her body heals.
“We are anticipating that she will have a full recovery,” said Dr.
Rade Tomic, medical director of the hospital’s lung transplant program.
The hospital said it believes it’s one of the first to perform a
double-lung transplant on a patient recovering from the virus. There
have only been a few other survivors, in China and Europe, who have
received the transplants.
Doctors said they now want to better understand why she became so severely ill compared to other cases of the virus.
“How did a healthy woman in her 20s get to this point? There’s still
so much we have yet to learn about COVID-19. Why are some cases worse
than others?” said Dr. Rade Tomic, a pulmonologist and medical director
of the Lung Transplant Program.
https://nypost.com/2020/06/11/patient-has-double-lung-transplant-due-to-coronavirus/
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