A boy who received a partial liver transplant from his mother and a kidney transplant from his father within a year has returned to school, National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH) said yesterday.
The boy, surnamed Hsu (許), who turns 12 this year, was diagnosed with congenital Caroli disease, hepatic fibrosis, splenomegaly and autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease, the hospital said in a statement.
He was just four months old when he was transferred to NTUH in cardiogenic shock, said Tsai I-jung (蔡宜蓉), head of the hospital’s Division of Pediatric Nephrology.
Photo: CNA
His condition later progressed to end-stage kidney disease, making treatment highly complex, Tsai said.
Hsu underwent a partial liver transplant in January last year, with his mother as the donor.
However, his kidney function deteriorated rapidly after the procedure, leading to a living donor kidney transplant from his father in January this year, said Lee Chih-yuan (李志元), an attending physician in the hospital’s Department of Surgery.
Hsu has returned to school and is expected to continue to recover well, provided he keeps taking anti-rejection medication, he said.
Undergoing two organ transplants within such a short period is rare, even among adults, Lee said, adding that Hsu was the hospital’s first pediatric case of its kind.
Hsu’s mother said the couple had long prepared for the possibility of organ donation, maintaining their health over the past decade to meet eligibility requirements.
NTUH said the case highlights the importance of multidisciplinary collaboration, from preoperative assessment and surgery to postoperative care, involving specialists in pediatrics, transplant surgery, nephrology, anesthesiology and nursing.
The hospital said it performed Asia’s first living donor kidney transplant in 1968 and has since completed more than 1,500 such procedures, the highest number in Taiwan.
NTUH has a 10-year post-transplant survival rate of 85 percent for kidney recipients, higher than the national average of 77 percent, Ministry of Health and Welfare data showed.
The hospital also called on the public to support organ donation.
Kenting National Park service technician Yang Jien-fon (楊政峰) won a silver award in World Grand Prix Photography Awards Spring Season for his photograph of two male rat snakes intertwined in combat. Yang’s colleagues at Kenting National Park said he is a master of nature photography who has been held back by his job in civil service. The awards accept entries in all four seasons across six categories: architectural and urban photography, black-and-white and fine art photography, commercial and fashion photography, documentary and people photography, nature and experimental photography, and mobile photography. Awards are ranked according to scores and divided into platinum, gold and
More than half of the bamboo vipers captured in Tainan in the past few years were found in the city’s Sinhua District (新化), while other districts had smaller catches or none at all. Every year, Tainan captures about 6,000 snakes which have made their way into people’s homes. Of the six major venomous snakes in Taiwan, the cobra, the many-banded krait, the brown-spotted pit viper and the bamboo viper are the most frequently captured. The high concentration of bamboo vipers captured in Sinhua District is puzzling. Tainan Agriculture Bureau Forestry and Nature Conservation Division head Chu Chien-ming (朱健明) earlier this week said that the
BREACH OF CONTRACT: The bus operators would seek compensation and have demanded that the manufacturer replace the chips with ones that meet regulations Two bus operators found to be using buses with China-made chips are to demand that the original manufacturers replace the systems and provide compensation for breach of contract, the Veterans Affairs Council said yesterday. Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Michelle Lin (林楚茵) yesterday said that Da Nan Bus Co and Shin-Shin Bus Co Ltd have fielded a total of 82 buses that are using Chinese chips. The bus models were made by Tron-E, while the systems provider was CYE Electronics, Lin said. Lin alleged that the buses were using chips manufactured by Huawei subsidiary HiSilicon Co, which presents a national security risk if the
The National Immigration Agency has banned two Chinese from returning to Taiwan, after they published social media content it described as disrespectful to national sovereignty. The agency imposed a two-month ban on a Chinese man surnamed Liang (梁) and a permanent ban on a woman surnamed Yang (楊), an influencer with 23 million followers, in October last year and last week respectively. Minister of the Interior Liu Shyh-fang (劉世芳) yesterday said on the sidelines of a legislative meeting that Chinese visitors to Taiwan are required to comply with the rules and regulations governing their entry permits. The government has handled the ban and