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+ Show Spoiler +
MIAMI – D'Zhana Simmons says she felt like a "fake person" for 118 days when she had no heart beating in her chest. "But I know that I really was here," the 14-year-old said, "and I did live without a heart."
As she was being released Wednesday from a Miami hospital, the shy teen seemed in awe of what she's endured. Since July, she's had two heart transplants and survived with artificial heart pumps — but no heart — for four months between the transplants.
Last spring D'Zhana and her parents learned she had an enlarged heart that was too weak to sufficiently pump blood. They traveled from their home in Clinton, S.C. to Holtz Children's Hospital in Miami for a heart transplant.
But her new heart didn't work properly and could have ruptured so surgeons removed it two days later.
And they did something unusual, especially for a young patient: They replaced the heart with a pair of artificial pumping devices that kept blood flowing through her body until she could have a second transplant.
Dr. Peter Wearden, a cardiothoracic surgeon at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh who works with the kind of pumps used in this case, said what the Miami medical team managed to do "is a big deal."
"For (more than) 100 days, there was no heart in this girl's body? That is pretty amazing," Wearden said.
The pumps, ventricular assist devices, are typically used with a heart still in place to help the chambers circulate blood. With D'Zhana's heart removed, doctors at Holtz Children's Hospital crafted substitute heart chambers using a fabric and connected these to the two pumps.
Although artificial hearts have been approved for adults, none has been federally approved for use in children. In general, there are fewer options for pediatric patients. That's because it's rarer for them to have these life-threatening conditions, so companies don't invest as much into technology that could help them, said Dr. Marco Ricci, director of pediatric cardiac surgery at the University of Miami.
He said this case demonstrates that doctors now have one more option.
"In the past, this situation could have been lethal," Ricci said.
And it nearly was. During the almost four months between her two transplants, D'Zhana wasn't able to breathe on her own half the time. She also had kidney and liver failure and gastrointestinal bleeding.
Taking a short stroll — when she felt up for it — required the help of four people, at least one of whom would steer the photocopier-sized machine that was the external part of the pumping devices.
When D'Zhana was stable enough for another operation, doctors did the second transplant on Oct. 29.
"I truly believe it's a miracle," said her mother, Twolla Anderson.
D'Zhana said now she's grateful for small things: She'll see her five siblings soon, and she can spend time outdoors.
"I'm glad I can walk without the machine," she said, her turquoise princess top covering most of the scars on her chest. After thanking the surgeons for helping her, D'Zhana began weeping.
Doctors say she'll be able to do most things that teens do, like attending school and going out with friends. She will be on lifelong medication to keep her body from rejecting the donated heart, and there's a 50-50 chance she'll need another transplant before she turns 30.
For now, though, D'Zhana is looking forward to celebrating another milestone. On Saturday, she turns 15 and plans to spend the day riding in a boat off Miami's coast.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081119/ap_on_he_me/med_artificial_heart
its pretty amazing what humans can achieve and can endure.
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O.M.G
im taking cells system biology right now in uni im not a science major at all, but it's a distribution requirement
and anyway, yea.. our bodies are amazing (from what i've learned so far anyway)
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It is truly amazing what modern medical science can do these days and how fast it progresses; ten years ago this girl probably would have died.
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On November 22 2008 08:18 Archaic wrote: O_O... Humans own... Pah natural selection just need more shit to do shit for you. cool thou either way = but i thought it was just alot of dialsis machines on da keep the blood flowing
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Just wait for the nano robots!!!
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just to prove that brain is the indicator of life! Imagine "Lol I lived 2 months w/o my BRAIN" xD
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On November 22 2008 09:17 evanthebouncy! wrote: just to prove that brain is the indicator of life! Imagine "Lol I lived 2 months w/o my BRAIN" xD
nvm i'm a dumbass
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Not the first one to live without a heart, yo~
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United States17042 Posts
the heart is pretty simple to do with machines. easier than dialysis even. the problem is getting a machine small enough and reliable enough so that you can walk around without a biological heart.
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On November 22 2008 09:47 waterGHOSTCLAWdragon wrote: the heart is pretty simple to do with machines. easier than dialysis even. the problem is getting a machine small enough and reliable enough so that you can walk around without a biological heart.
not just that, the materials that they make artificial hearts with can cause a lot of problems with immune response, and blood clots relatively easily in the artificial hearts compared to real ones
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Penis donation is very kind.
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I'll donate my penis to you. :OO
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On November 22 2008 09:39 Flaccid wrote:Not the first one to live without a heart, yo~
rofl at noheart
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United States42690 Posts
It's not that remarkable, the body is simply a machine. What is remarkable is that the solution the body has found to the problem of pumping blood is so much smaller, more efficient and more durable than the best mechanical alternative we can come up with. That with all our science and technology evolution still outdoes us so much.
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On November 22 2008 09:17 evanthebouncy! wrote: just to prove that brain is the indicator of life! Imagine "Lol I lived 2 months w/o my BRAIN" xD
I don't think anyone is in doubt that the brain is what makes you work
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On November 22 2008 08:18 Archaic wrote: O_O... Humans own...
No....
NightElf > Human
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Was she concious during those 4 months? Anyway, it is amazing
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As a mechanical engineering student, I would be livid if I created the heart-pump machine and then the mother described her reaction to the fact that it worked as: "I truly believe it was a miracle." It's not a miracle, bitch, it's math! But anyway it's pretty incredible what modern medicine is capable of, and how alarmingly fast the field is growing.
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On November 22 2008 16:29 Meta wrote: As a mechanical engineering student, I would be livid if I created the heart-pump machine and then the mother described her reaction to the fact that it worked as: "I truly believe it was a miracle." It's not a miracle, bitch, it's math! But anyway it's pretty incredible what modern medicine is capable of, and how alarmingly fast the field is growing.
As an electrical engineering student, the control system that controls the pump-machine is 10 times more significant than the actual pumping.

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I'll accept one like this for a transplant
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Oh my God, is she a dragoon?
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I'm glad she put her heart into it.
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On November 22 2008 18:05 liosama wrote:Show nested quote +On November 22 2008 16:29 Meta wrote: As a mechanical engineering student, I would be livid if I created the heart-pump machine and then the mother described her reaction to the fact that it worked as: "I truly believe it was a miracle." It's not a miracle, bitch, it's math! But anyway it's pretty incredible what modern medicine is capable of, and how alarmingly fast the field is growing. As an electrical engineering student, the control system that controls the pump-machine is 10 times more significant than the actual pumping.  that may well be the case, sir, but my point still stands.
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On November 22 2008 22:34 Artanis[Xp] wrote: I'm glad she put her heart into it. During transplants she was heartly living.
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On November 22 2008 12:30 Kwark wrote: It's not that remarkable, the body is simply a machine. What is remarkable is that the solution the body has found to the problem of pumping blood is so much smaller, more efficient and more durable than the best mechanical alternative we can come up with. That with all our science and technology evolution still outdoes us so much.
Evolution has been going on for more than a billion years. Is it not truly remarkable that we as a species after only about 100 000 have started to catch up? (Of course us developing the ability to replace natural body functions with artificial ones is in itself a result of evolution, but you get my point.)
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man stories like these make me pumped up to be a premed they just get my blood circulating you know what i mean like modern medicine is evalving so fast that just can't help but feel that everything is going to be ventriclating soon.
now i'm going to use the chamber pot.
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Russian Federation4333 Posts
If she's one of those snobby rich girls then no wonder she could live so long without a heart. I bet she could do it for years.
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wat man would donate his penis? like lets be real here
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I'd assume you'd donate it when you die
That still boggles my mind. Dick Donater
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On November 23 2008 07:34 Caller wrote: man stories like these make me pumped up to be a premed they just get my blood circulating you know what i mean like modern medicine is evalving so fast that just can't help but feel that everything is going to be ventriclating soon.
now i'm going to use the chamber pot. I laughed wholeheartedly.
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On November 22 2008 12:44 H_ wrote:Show nested quote +On November 22 2008 09:17 evanthebouncy! wrote: just to prove that brain is the indicator of life! Imagine "Lol I lived 2 months w/o my BRAIN" xD I don't think anyone is in doubt that the brain is what makes you work
afaik no one has a brain but me.
the fact that this little girl had a synthetic material heart. with internal blood contact being the reason most foreign body organs are rejected in the first place, means she would have been near incapacitated with anticoagulants and immunosuppressants. gl to her but TBH fk all transplants. not saying im unwilling to loan my penis out to the right girl.
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you don't need a heart to be human.
you'd need love to be one.
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On November 22 2008 08:26 D10 wrote: Just wait for the nano robots!!!
nano technology is terrifying.
imagine someone being able to penetrate your body without you knowing it.
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omg... what am i sitting here using mine for...
bidding starting at $3....
anybody?...
any1?...
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and i thought my girlfriend had no heart... amazing.
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its really incredible how advanced technology is
i dont know the stats for heart transplants and the length of the waiting list, but a 120days man? a third of a year? thats gotta be helping people on the list alot more than it did before
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