GOOGLE-LeaderBoard

Tuesday 15 January 2013

My heart in my hand after successful Heart Transplant

  • Cancer and organ failure risked her life.
  • Excitement is visible after having two hearts at the same time.
  • Doctors did allow her to take a photograph of her heart in her hand.
  • Penny holds her heart like a trophy.
  • Around 3,500 patients undergo heart transplant every year worldwide.
  • Penny is one of the luckiest one to survive the complications.
A transplant patient has been pictured holding her own heart in her
hands after she survived cancer and organ failure.

Even with the medical mask hiding most of her face, 'Penny's' wide-eyed grin is clear as her new heart beats in her chest and she holds the old one for one last time following the successful procedure.

Penny's friend Kelsey posted this image on her Imgur profile saying: '[Penny] is holding her own heart. She has survived cancer and crippling heart failure and never lost hope.'

According to Kelsey's profile, doctors allowed Penny to take a photograph with her dead heart before it was cremated.

Wrapping both hands around it, she holds the heart up to the camera as if it were a trophy.

Now a picture of health, she has this photograph as a keepsake of her ordeal and a reminder of how lucky she is to have received the new heart.

Around 4,000 people every year in the U.S. need a heart transplant but only around 2,300 are able to get them.

Worldwide, about 3,500 heart transplants are performed annually.

A patient is usually kept in the hospital for up to two weeks after the procedure and the amount of recovery time depends on the health of the patient.

No comments:

Post a Comment