PITTSBURGH, Pa. (Ivanhoe Newswire) ā One in five people on the waiting list for a donor liver will die before an organ becomes available. Over the past two years, the number of people undergoing living liver transplantation in the U.S. has risen from 300 in 2017 to over 400 last year.
Thirty-seven-year old Wayne Livingston hated pancakes until six months ago. Now he canāt get enough of them. Fitness and pancakes are two things Livingston has in common with 49-year old Rina Kader. The third? A piece of Kader is now inside Livingston. Livingston had a life-threatening liver condition, hiding his yellowing eyes behind dark glasses. He needed a transplant but couldnāt even get on the donor list because of insurance restrictions. Despite growing fatigue last year, Livingston continued his landscaping job.
āI was at Rinaās and was letting her know I might not be able to cut your grass in the fall. She said, āwhy, whatās wrong?ā I said I have to have a liver transplant, and I donāt know what thatās going to look like,ā said Livingston.
In that instant, Kader made a decision to help a man she barely knew.
āThe need was there. And I felt I could fill it,ā said Kader.
Nationwide, five percent of all liver donations are from a live donor. At UPMC in Pittsburgh, itās 55 percent.
With living liver donation, surgeons need just a portion since it has the unique ability to grow back.
Abhi Humar, MD, Chief of Transplant Surgery at UPMC said, āSo within eight to ten weeks the liver will regenerate back to full size.ā
On October 22nd, both Kader and Livingston entered the hospital. Kaderās surgery started first, followed by Livingstonās. Both were successful.
āAll these beautiful wonderful things in life have to start somewhere with one person saying yes,ā Kader shared.
One personās leap-of-faith, becoming anotherās second chance.Ā
āMy angel happened to be someone I was cutting grass for. Who knew?ā Livingston told Ivanhoe.
Livingstonās wife Tasha was willing to donate a portion of her liver to him, but as his primary caretaker after the surgery, doctors would not consider her.Ā Ā None of his family members were a match. Livingston says after everything theyāve been through, he and Tasha consider Kader a sister, not just a friend or donor.
Contributors to this news report include: Cyndy McGrath, Supervising and Field Producer; Hayley Hudson, Assistant Producer; Roque Correa, Editor; Kirk Manson, Videographer.