The Asian Age

Brain dead man gives new lease of life to 4 others

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The organs of a 26- yearold brain dead MBA student gave a new lease of life to four critically ill persons, to whom his organs were donated.

Ashutosh Sharma, who was working as an intern with a Delhi- based company, met with a road accident on April 7, while proceeding to his office. He was admitted to Indraprast­ha Apollo Hospital in a critical condition.

Sharma’s condition steadily deteriorat­ed and on April 12, he stopped showing any brain stem reflex activity and was declared brain dead on April 15.

While his heart was donated to a 33- year- old man, diagnosed with poor heart function, his liver was transplant­ed to a 49year- old patient suffering from chronic kidney disease ( CKD) and was on dialysis. Sharma’s second kidney was donated to another person in a different hospital, said Dr Bhabha Nanda Das, cardio, thoracic and vascular surgeon, Apollo Hospital.

According to figures with the National Organ Transplant and Tissue Organisati­on ( NOTTO), while there is a demand for two lakh kidney transplant­s annually, only 8,000 are being done.

Similarly, around 50,000 people need liver transplant operations and 30,000 need heart transplant­s against the availabili­ty of 3,000 and 100, respective­ly.

The shortage of organs has led to an ever- increasing demand- supply gap, even though every person who dies naturally or is declared brain dead is a potential donor. A team of doctors performed the heart transplant procedure at the hospital in a four- hour- long surgery.

“All three recipients at Apollo Hospitals have started to show signs of improvemen­t and are being monitored by a team of doctors,” said a statement by the hospital.

“In this case Sharma’s mother has shown courage and determinat­ion. Even in her loss, she is happy that her son is the reason for a new lease of life for four people. We need to create awareness on organ donation to save lakhs of patients suffering from organ failure,” said A. Bajpai, MD, Indraprast­ha Apollo Hospitals.

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