Courtesy Readers Digest 1981. November.
From the frontiers of science and the far horizons of
personal courage, these stories of medical triumphs and miracles will reaffirm
your faith in the awesome powers of the human spirit. Dramatic victories and human
triumphs.
SELECTED AND EDITED BY THE EDITORS OF READERS DIGEST
Football was
the most important thing in 14-year-old Todd Conner’s life, until his brother
Allen was born, on October 7, 1975. The
squirmy nine-pound infant charmed the would-be grid star, and soon Tood was
vying with his sister Lori Ann, 15, for opportunities to help their mother with
the new arrival.
One afternoon
in November—less than six weeks after the baby’s birth—Todd was holding Allen
in the crook of his arm, natural as football.
As he lowered the baby into the bassinet, he noticed that the infant’s
head was wet with perspiration. Todd
held out a finger and five tiny fingers twined around it. Then, suddenly, the chubby hand tightened
convulsively and the baby’s body went limp.
“Mother!”
Todd shouted. “Something’s wrong!”
Unable to
revive, her infant son, Carolyn Conner rushed Allen 20 miles from their home in
Conyers, Georgia, to Henrietta Engleston Hospital for Children in Atlanta. Their doctors shaved off his blond ringlets
and punctured the soft spot on his head with intravenous needles attached to
tubes. Physicians probed, palpated and
X-rayed; technicians pricked the tin fingers, drawing blood, and left with
pipettes filled, slides carefully smeared and labeled. Nurses collected urine samples recorded his
fluid intake, blood pressure and temperature.
Two days
later, the diagnosis showed that Allen had suffered permanent kidney
impairment. The two vesico-ureteral
valves on the tubes leading from the kidneys to the bladder did not function
properly. Thus, urine flowed back into
his kidneys, severely damaging them.
To repair the
valves and stop the backup, Allen needed surgery. But he was too young and weak for such an
intricate operation. Instead, the
surgeons opened Allen’s abdomen and made an incision in his bladder to excess
urine could drain through a catheter.
The major surgery would have to wait until he weighed at least 16
pounds.
The first
time he saw his baby brother with the needles inserted into the veins beneath
his scalp, Todd turned away. “Does it
hurt him? He asked weakly. Though his
father, Perry Conner, and his mother and the nurses assured him Allen couldn’t
feel the needles, Todd’s own head hurt sympathy.
Seven weeks
after entering the hospital, Allen was allowed to go home. The interim surgery had put life back to
him. He learned to sit up and crawl. However, at seven months, he still weighed
less than his birth weight.
One day Tood
found him asleep in the family room and saw that his skin was white as talcum
powder. Todd’s yell immediately brought
his mother. She grasped the skin of the
baby’s abdomen between her thumb and forefinger. Instead of being supple and falling back in
place, the pinched-up ridge remained.
“He’s dehydrated,” Carolyn said, gathering Allen up and heading for the
hospital.
This time it
was five weeks before doctors let the boy come home, and after they did there
was a family council. “The nephrologist
says Allen will probably develop kidney failure-possibly before he’s a year
old,” Carolyn explained, her voice shaking.
But during
the following weeks, with diet and heavy meditation, Allen’s condition
stabilized. His birthday came and went:
Tood organized a party for him, with cake, punch and balloons. He learned to walk, stand on his head,
whistle, and pull off his clothes. His
favorite pastime was galloping around the house on Todd’s back, shouting, “Go,
horsy!”
By December
15, 1976, Allen weighs 16 pounds and the Atlanta nephrologist told Carolyn
Conner that he could now withstand the valve-reimplantation surgery.
Allen knew
from his earlier hospitalizations that “losing” his shoes, meant pain would
follow. When his parents had their tiny
son ready for the hospital, Todd bent down and tied a double knot in his
brother’s shoelaces. “Hang on to these
shoes, boy,” he said with affection.
Then prayed: ‘Dear God, please let him come back.’
The operation
went smooth and Allen returned home on Christmas Eve, weighing 13 pounds. His favorite Christmas toy came from Todd—a
big green frog he could ride, even when he felt so bad he couldn’t walk. Once again the toddler commandeered Todd for
his horse and made him his general slave.
Allen’s well being
lasted until July 1977. Then he lost his
appetite. Nothing, not even Todd’s
coaxing, could get him to eat enough to maintain his weight.
Doctors
suggested garage—force-feeding through a tube inserted in Allen’s nose and
running into his stomach. With a
high-calorie formula and four daily feedings, the boy gained a little weight
and grew an inch. Meanwhile, his blood
tests, taken every other day, indicated stable kidney function.
Then suddenly
in January 1978, the tests showed further deterioration. By mid-January he walked unsteadily he walked
unsteadily, and by mid-February he stumbled occasionally. Again the Conners took him to a specialist in
Atlanta. The doctor said he had a bone
disease that goes with kidney failure.
By March,
Allen could hardly walk. So Todd carried
him the burden of his knowledge far heavier than his little brother. Every time the child was taken to the doctor,
Todd insisted on a complete report.
Twenty-five times Allen’s head had been shaved for intravenous feeding.
Now came new
word from the specialist: Allen must go to the University of Minnesota Hospital
for hemodialisis, a blood cleaning process—called dialysis for short.
“The hospital
is world-famous for its success in treating kidney diseases in very young
children,” Carolyn Conner assured her family.
Then after a long pause she added, “Allen will have to have a kidney
transplant this summer. If it’s
successful it will cure the bone disease too.”
For a moment
Todd could not speak. Then he lifted his
eyes to his parents. “Mine,” he
said. “I want to give Allen one of my
kidneys.”
“Todd, your
mom and I thought you’d volunteer,” his father replied. “But we’re against it. If either you or Lori give a kidney and it
didn’t work, and then something happened to you…” He chocked over the
words. “Besides, with only one kidney,
you might not be able to play football.”
“I don’t care
about that!” Todd blurted. “Allen needs
a kidney, and when that plane leaves Minneapolis, I want to be on it with
him. You’ve got to let me be tested.”
One week
later, Todd and Lori Ann—who had also countered a kidney and insisted on being
tested—sat with their parents in the office of Dr. John Najarian at the
University of Minnesota Hospital.
“Rejection is the major concern,” Najarian said, ‘so we check for tissue
compatibility. Tissue typing is done
through four genetic makers called antigens.
For a donor and recipient to be compactable, at least two antigens must
match from a sibling, there’s a 90 to 95 percent change of success. It’s a 70 to 75 percent chance if the donor
is a parent, and 50-50 if it’s some other family member.”
Perry and
Carolyn Conner, and Lori, all proved two antigen matches. Todd showed a four-antigen match—so close to
Allen’s tissue that only an identical twin could be more compactable. His parents consented to the transplant.
While 2 ½
-year-old Allen continued dialysis as an outpatient, Todd began the
psychological testing required before such surgery. One day the topic was sports. The psychologist asked, “You think you’re a
pretty good football player?”
“Fair,” Todd
muttered.
“Ever dream
of being the fasted back, the highest-scoring end?”
“Yeah, I’ve
thought about it.” Todd’s voice was
high, tense.
When the
session was over, Todd dent to the dialysis section of the hospital and stood
outside the door listening to the soft whir of the machines cleaning his
brother’s blood—a four-hour, three-times-a-week process. He scuffed his toe, the way he’d do for an
onside kick. How did that doctor guess
about those dreams”? Yes, he would miss
sports, especially football. But he’d
have something better to take its place: the finest little brother who ever
lived.
On May 10,
1978, Todd woke early, long before the scheduled 6:30 a.m. surgery. Despite the pills meant to calm him,
butterflies churned in his stomach the way they did before a big game. A hospital orderly bumped opens his door with
rolling bed. The 16-year-old climbed
abroad and was wheeled off toward surgery.
“Todd!” He heard his brother’s voice, shaky with
tears. An attendant pushed another cart
toward him with a tiny lump under the sheet—Allen. The little boy looked white and afraid, but
his right arm wiggled out from under the sheet, and he waved and smiled.
The orderlies
pushed the carts into the same elevator.
Allen kicked his sheet off, exposing red shakers—laced and tied in a
double knot! He climbed over on Todd’s
cart and locked his skinny arms around his brother’s neck.
“After
today,” Todd said huskily, “you’re not going to hurt anymore.”
“ Know,” said
Allen. Suddenly his chin began to
quiver. “Todd, when they give me part of
you, will you hurt?”
Hiss little
brother had suffered so much, yet here he was worrying about him. “Nope,” Todd said, pulling Allen close. “It won’t hurt me, because you’re my
brother.”
The elevator
door slid open and the attendants rolled them toward adjoining rooms.
A dozen
green-clad doctors and nurses clustered around Allen. An incision was made down the middle of his
abdomen, and his shriveled kidneys were removed. Then Dr. Najarian went into next room where
another surgical team had opened Todd halfway around at the waist on one side,
to remove the right kidney. Dr. Najarian
returned almost immediately, cupping in his big hands something that looked
like a shiny wet potato. He placed it in
a basin of sterile solution to wash away the blood and cool the kidney for a
better take. Meanwhile, Todd’s incision
was closed and he was whisked to recovery.
Allen’s
abdominal cavity looked far too small to accept his brother’s kidney, nearly
three times the size of his own. It was
a tight fit, but doctors knew that soon after the operation the kidney would
shrink to the size Allen needed. Then,
as he started to grow, it would grow with him at a normal rate. Six hours elapsed before Dr. Najarian,
grinning with relief, reported to the Conners that Todd’s kidney was
functioning in Allen.
The next day
Todd asked to be wheeled down to Allen’s room.
Through the bed railing the two brothers kissed and repeated each
other’s names over. For the next two
weeks, Allen received interjection serum—administered via tube inserted in his
neck during surgery. Then, 14 days after
surgery, Allen and his parents flew home to Georgia. [Todd had left a week
later].
Today, nearly
three years later, with his doctor’s approval, Todd is working as a landscaper
in his father’s business. Allen is in
kindergarten and has achieved the normal height and weight for a child of his
age. Once a month his mother takes him
for blood tests at a nearby clinic; the results are phoned to Minnesota for
monitoring. For the rest of his life he
will take ante rejection medication. But
thanks to Todd’s precious gift, the lively 5-year-old now has a future, a
chance for a full and happy life.
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