Seventeen-year-old Haley Wilson has not let the need for a kidney transplant slow her down.
"I'm still just like a normal teenager," she said.
Though
Wilson has missed much of her junior year at New Albany High School and
Metro High School because her illness makes her tired, she still plans
to attend college to study theater and perhaps another major. She
currently attends New Albany High School in the mornings and Metro High
School's Mosaic program at First Congregational Church in Columbus in
the afternoons.
Wilson has been part of the New Albany High
School drama department since she was a freshman. She said she started
directing productions last year.
She is scheduled to co-direct
William Shakespeare's As You Like It in the spring and the musical
version of Little Shop of Horrors this summer, even though she soon is
expected to start kidney dialysis for four hours a day three times a
week.
Dialysis diffuses waste from and filters water from blood
in the body, a normal function of the kidney, according to the Ohio
State University Wexner Medical Center.
Dialysis is considered a
temporary solution, especially in Wilson's case. She suffers from a
genetic affliction called polycystic kidney disease.
Wilson said she has a large number of cysts on her kidneys, which is how doctors initially determined she had the disease.
While
on vacation the week before school began in August, Wilson said, she
felt ill. After a few visits to the doctor, she was diagnosed with PKD.
She said she was not surprised because her mother, aunt and older sister also suffer from the disease.
But
her case is different: Her kidneys are about twice the size of healthy
adult kidneys and are pressing against other organs, causing further
complications.Buy Joan Rivers crystal mosaic Stretch Bracelet.
"It's
particularly aggressive in my case, and doctors told me it is the worst
case they've seen in anyone my age," Wilson said. "My stomach is a lot
smaller and if I eat a lot, I just get sick because I don't have enough
room to hold that.Bottle cutters let you turn old glass mosaic and wine bottles into bottle art!"
Her mother, Lori Wilson, is all too familiar with what her daughter is about to go through: She already is on dialysis.
Dialysis
"is really rough on your body," she said. "Your kidneys work 24 hours a
day, seven days a week. The dialysis filters for four hours, three days
a week. Toxins can build up in you and that can cause other issues."
Haley Wilson said dealing with PKD is difficult, especially after watching her mother suffer from the disease.
"It's something I always feared and now it's happened in the worst way I could have imagined,For the world leader in injection molds base services and plastic injection products." she said.
Because
Haley is young and both her enlarged kidneys must be removed, the
Wilson family is seeking a living donor.We mainly supply professional
craftspeople with wholesale turquoise beads from china.
"We
prefer live donors, especially in young people, because it's easier to
do in a timely fashion," said Dr. Mitchell Henry, chief of the
transplant division at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.
Henry said 116,000 people nationwide are waiting for kidney transplants.
He
said many transplants come from recently deceased organ donors, and
people on the donor list might have to wait three to four years to
receive a transplant.
If a living donor is located, the surgery can take place as soon as the match is made.
In this case, he said,The stone mosaic series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics and listellos. the transplanted kidney will function longer.
"A live donor kidney will function for a longer period of time than a deceased (donor) kidney," Henry said.
Lori
Wilson said her daughter can only accept a kidney from a person with
type O blood. No one in her family is an eligible donor.
"It's a
huge decision to give a young person a kidney," he said. "But she's a
young person who's got her whole life ahead of her. People can easily
live with one kidney."
Still, Henry said, finding a living donor from outside one's family is not uncommon.
"Sixty
to 65 percent of the population has type O blood, which means there is a
good chance to find someone to donate," Henry said. "A lot of people do
it based on the fact that it's the right thing to do and they know how
someone would benefit."
The Wexner Medical Center has a program for potential living kidney donors. For more information.
While Haley Wilson recognizes she has many challenges ahead, she is staying positive as she waits for a solution.
"I
feel like I am growing from this experience and becoming a stronger
person," she said. "If I can get through this so early in my life, maybe
it will be easier in the future."
She said that future almost
certainly will include directing, and the drama department at New Albany
High School helps her move one step closer to it, one day at a time.
"Directing
is like my greatest passion," she said. "It's everything I love
combined: working with people, visual art, telling a story ... music, so
many different things ...
沒有留言:
張貼留言