Over the next few days, the transplant team had to reject two donor livers. The first did not match Michelle’s immune system; the second contained cancerous cells. Finally, with time running out, a third liver became available. “They told me that if the liver wasn't a match, Michelle's chances were very slimThey told me if that liver wasn’t a match, I would need to start making funeral arrangements,” Leonard said. Luckily, the organ matched. At 11:03 a.m. Aug. 8, Druzin’s high-risk obstetrics team delivered John, who was rushed to the neonatal intensive care unit at Packard. Esquivel’s transplant team immediately began operating to give Michelle a new liver. The transplant worked. “To end up with the mom and child surviving all this is unbelievable,” said Esquivel. “The strength of being at a place like Packard is the ability to have world experts in all fields collaborate on very unusual cases like this,” Druzin added. After the operation, Michelle spent about a month in the hospital, gradually regaining awareness and healing from her surgeries. As a preemie, John stayed nearly three months at Packard Children’s before his mom, dad and sister welcomed him home in November. Michelle is still adjusting to her unexpected transplant and the unexpected birth of her son while she was in a coma. “When I was told what happened, I thought, OK, it’s done,” she said. “I wasn’t mad or angry. I just thought, what am I supposed to learn from this? What can I teach someone else?” Her entire family has a new appreciation for organ donation. “You don’t realize what it means until you see it in action,” Leonard said. Doctors at Packard Children’s and at Stanford Hospital say both mom and baby have excellent prospects, and the family is now joyously preparing for John’s first Christmas. “We’re going to go a little crazy with gifts for the kids,” Michelle said happily. “It’s definitely their Christmas this year.”
WE LOVE YOU ALL!MAY GOD CONTINUE TO BLESS YOUR FAMILY FOREVER AND EVER.
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