Hindustan Times (East UP)

Organs donated by 19-yr-old girl give four new lease of life

- Soumya Pillai soumya.pillai@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Over the last six years, since her 19-year-old daughter fell ill, 55-year-old Divya Devi had passed the hoarding encouragin­g people to donate their organs, outside Delhi’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences campus, several times. But, she said, she never thought that she will have to make the decision someday.

However, when she had to decide, Devi did not hesitate, and the gesture helped save at least four patients.

“Doctors told me that my child, Lata, was brain dead, they could do nothing to save her. They told me that many lives could be saved if I agreed to donate her organs. I had always dreamt of doing her ‘kanyadaan’ some day, but that could not happen, at least I could do her ‘angdaan’ (organ donation)... some other children will live,” said Devi on Wednesday.

Dr Aarti Vij, who heads AIIMS’s Organ Retrieval banking Organisati­on, said awareness about organ donation actually helps people to decide when the time comes. “It is always an emotional moment for the family as they have just lost a dear one, and they have a decision to make regarding donating organs. It does help in counsellin­g family members if there has already been a discussion on organ donation before,” she said.

Doctors at AIIMS said that Lata’s heart was successful­ly transplant­ed to a patient in AIIMS, her liver and one kidney was allocated to the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, and the other kidney was sent to the Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital through the National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organisati­on.

“The patient was brought to AIIMS emergency department with complaints of seizure. She was admitted to the neurosurge­ry department and was diagnosed with raised intra cranial pressure, hydrocepha­lus with shunt malfunctio­n. Late last night (Tuesday night), she was declared brain stem dead,” AIIMS said in a statement on Wednesday.

Increased intracrani­al pressure is a rise in the pressure inside the skull that can result from either a medical condition or brain injury, and hydrocepha­lus is the build-up of fluid in the cavities deep within the brain, which in Lata’s case also led to blockage of the shunt.

Lata’s 21-year-old brother, Prem Kumar, said she turned 19 on January 10, and it was around the same time that they were awaiting a surgery date at AIIMS to remove her kidney stones, which was unrelated to her neurologic­al condition.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India