Seven-year-old
donates cornea, thousands touched
Nguyen Hai An, 7, of Hanoi’s Nam Tu Liem District, took her last
breath on February 22. But before she passed away in her K Hospital sickbed,
she and her mother agreed that she would give her cornea to children who
could use it.
An
became the second-youngest person to donate a cornea in the country so far.
The
little girl, who had fought astrocytomas since September 2017, nodded without
hesitation after her mother said she wanted to continue to see An’s eyes in
the coming years by giving An’s cornea to other children.
Astrocytomas
are tumours that arise from astrocytes—star-shaped cells that make up the
“glue-like” or supportive tissue of the brain. The tumours are “graded” on a
scale from I to IV based on how normal or abnormal the cells look. There are
low-grade astrocytomas and high-grade astrocytomas. Low-grade astrocytomas
are usually localised and grow slowly. High-grade astrocytomas grow at a
rapid pace and require a different course of treatment. Most
astrocytoma tumors in children are low grade.
Pham
Thi Viet Huong, deputy head of the hospital’s Pediatrics Department, who
directly treated An, said that when An was hospitalised last year, she was
already in bad condition.
An
had severe headaches, paralysis on one side of her body and had to breathe
via an oxygen tube, Huong said.
“An
is really a very good child,” Huong said.
“She
always obeys every request of the doctors for her treatment, although she had
overwhelming pains due to the tumour, which a little girl could not bear,”
Huong said.
An
was one of the most special patients Huong had met. “I could not forget the
little girl with a sunny smile and bright eyes,” Huong added.
“An’s
tumour was so large that we could not use radiotherapy – the only strategy
that might have rescued her at that time,” Huong said.
Cornea taken and given
Nguyen
Huu Hoang, director of the Viet Nam National Co-ordinating Centre for Human
Organ Transplantation, recalled the moment he came to An’s house to take her
cornea as An and her parents expected.
“The
first moment I entered the house, An was cradled in her mother’s arms like
she was sleeping tight,” he said.
Hoang
and his two colleagues tried to conduct the 30-minute surgery as gently as
they could. An’s cornea later was preserved in the Bank of Eyes under the Ha
Noi-based National Hospital of Ophthalmology before being transplanted for
people in need.
This
was the second surgery Hoang and his colleagues had undertaken to take a
cornea from a child. "But the surgery still ended with the doctors in
tears," Hoang said.
They
felt deeply touched because An’s parents overcame the normal prejudice that
people’s bodies should be complete when they die in order to donate An’s
cornea, Hoang said.
Not
only the doctors but also thousands of other people had the same feeling of
respect and gratitude when they heard An’s story, including Minister of
Health Nguyen Thi Kim Tien. She sent a condolence wreath to An.
Nguyen
Hoang Phuc, deputy director of the Viet Nam National Co-ordinating Centre for
Human Organ Transplantation, said, “Everyone can live the second life after
he or she dies if he or she donates a part of their body to people who need
it.”
An’s
cornea yesterday afternoon were transplanted to two people, including a
73-year-old person and a 42-year-old person after the consultation of the
hospital’s doctors. The 73-year-old person has cornea scarring and the
42-year-old was born with a cataract.
An’s
cornea was very precious: a survey by the hospital showed up to 300,000
people need a cornea transplant, but only 100-150 people receive a cornea
each year due to a national shortage.
Law amendment proposal
Nguyen
Tran Thuy Duong, An’s mother, said first that she wanted to donate her
daughter’s organ. Nevertheless, the current law did not allow it. The Law on
Organ Donation only permits people above 18 years old to donate organs. So An
alone couldn’t make the decision to donate her cornea.
“I
want to do that because I know many sick children who are in need of organ
transplantation,” Duong said.
Therefore,
Phuc, the deputy director of the centre, said the centre would submit to the
health ministry and the Government to amend the law in the coming time.
The
age of organ donator should be adjusted, he said.
“If
we do that, we will save more people,” he said.
VNS
|
Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 2, 2018
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