Popular Posts

Popular Posts

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Becoming a donor can save lives: One family is trying for a record of donor enlistments

A North Dakota couple whose daughter died in 2004 while awaiting a double lung transplant, wants to set a Guinness world record for the most new organ donors to be signed up in eight  hours. The purpose is not just to set a record but to raise awareness about becoming a donor.  Here is the Forum newspaper's account:


FARGO - Monica Kersting is out to set a Guinness world record and she needs at least 4,136 people to help her do it.
The West Fargo woman leads the “Give to Live” challenge drive to sign up more than 4,135 people as organ donors in North Dakota in eight hours.
To do that, Monica, her husband, Loren, and a couple hundred volunteers will have to process every new organ donor’s paperwork in less than 7 seconds – at least eight a minute.
The Kerstings, who also founded Alexa’s Hope, an organization dedicated to ending the need for waiting lists for organ transplants, say the mass sign-up in Fargo on Nov. 23 will help toward that end.
Alexa’s Hope is named after Monica and Loren’s daughter, Alexa Kersting, who died in 2004 at the age of 14 while awaiting a double-lung transplant.
“I just thought it would be a great way to raise awareness, and to kind of really bring that need to the forefront,” Monica Kersting said. “It’s the kind of event that people get excited about. It creates a lot of buzz. That’s what we need to make people more aware.”
The sign-up will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at three sites:
    The Fargodome, 1800 N. University Drive, for the 19,000 fans attending the     football game between North Dakota State University and the University of South Dakota.
    Fargo Air Museum, 1609 19th Ave. N.
    The Coliseum. 807 17th Ave. N.
An adjudicator from Guinness will be at the Fargo Air Museum, Kersting said.
Guinness rules allow for more than one sign-up site, as long as they are within a half mile of each other, Loren Kersting said.
“We’re trying to make it as convenient as we can, so no one has to stand in line or stand outside,” he said.
The website www.alexashope.org has links to sign up as an event volunteer, downloadable organ donation forms that can be filled out in advance, and the guidelines on what people need to do to become an organ donor through the event.
Potential donors must be 18 to register in the challenge, though there is no upper age limit. People from anywhere in the U.S. or Canada can sign up at the three sites. Beyond turning in a completed organ donation form, participants must show a driver’s license or state identification card.
North Dakotans who already have “donor” on their license or ID can’t sign up at the event, but they can volunteer and are encouraged to invite others to sign up.
Guinness rules do allow people registered as organ donors in other states to sign up at the North Dakota event and still be counted, Loren Kersting said.
The record for signing up the most organ donors was set Jan. 1, 2013, at Dharmsinh Desai University in Gujarat, India.
Funding for the drive comes from a grant by the Dakota Medical Foundation, the Kerstings said.
Loren Kersting said there are 120,000 people on transplant waiting lists in the U.S. An average of 18 people die every day while waiting for transplants, he said. 

Organ and tissue donors are selfless givers of life.  If you are not a donor, sign up to become one. It doesn't hurt, takes a few minutes, and may save someone's life.  I wouldn't be here to write this post if not for the donation of a heart last June 8.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Five plus months down range from a heart transplant: Adapt and Overcome

The combination of drugs I take to stave off rejection of my new heart, particularly Prednisone, a well used steroid, are playing havoc with my blood sugar levels.  

I'm told that normal blood sugar levels are about 100 mg/dl.  Newly transplanted patients often experience higher blood sugar levels until weaned entirely from Prednisone.  My levels have ranged into the low 300s. Continual high blood sugar can interfere with the healing process.

Within the first weeks after transplant, I was administered both long acting and short acting insulin to tame the high blood sugar levels.

Then after several weeks the insulin regime ceased.  Don't worry about it, I was told.  The blood sugar levels will return to normal in  time.

Last month, the cardio team at the University of Minnesota Hospital decided that an insulin regimen.  I take the long acting variety once a day and the faster acting variety before meals.  

I carry my blood sugar monitoring kit with me in my "go bag," which also has juice, hard candy( juice and candy are needed when my blood sugar falls below 70), procedure masks, hand sanitizer etc. as part of my standard kit.  Not a heavy as the LVAD bag, but I don't leave home without it.