not albumin ,it was bulirubin which was 10
I have had liver transplant on 07 july 2012. I was detected with viral HB during a routine check up sometime in December 2011. There was no symptom and absolutely no problems too,then. I started with medication and for reasons not known, my condition got worsened day by day. By may 2012, my albumin was nearly 10 and so were the other parameters in LFT. There was no other way left to me than getting a new liver. My wife volunteered to give me part of her liver though we were in different blood groups ( mine AB+ and hers B+ ) the operation was conducted at cochin,India. During the operation there were few complications like haemorrhage and bile leakage. However, subsequently my conditions got stabilised and got discharged in a months time. Presently all my medical parameters are within reference range. I started with nearly a dozen medicines and now thereare only three ( tacrolimus,entevir and udiliv ). Iam now fit and as healthy as ever.
I wish u a quick recovery. Initial few days after the operation will be miserable with dejection, hallucination, anger, etc. keep cool. Take all the medicines prescribed ( a tough deed inteed ) and take plenty of food as ordered by your doctor. So many of us have undergone the same condition what you going through now. Now cheer up and hope to see fit as a fiddle in these columns, may be a month after. Thanks
I know a friend that had a liver transplant. The trasplant went well. After 9 months she showed the HCV again. Was put on a 24 month treatment and was one of the lucky ones that cleared the virus. She was genotype 1a. If you didn't know you would think there was nothing wrong with her.
Each individual is different and no one knows what will happen until you try it and find out. I wish you the best in your treatment to clear the virus.
i am suffering frm primary bilary liver chriosis & treatment is gng since 2003,their is sum improvement but still skin tone has not cleared & its getting darker,there is also burning sensation in my feets & pain in my legs............do suggest wht is to be done...........
i am suffering frm primary bilary liver chriosis & treatment is gng since 2003,their is sum improvement but still skin tone has not cleared & its getting darker,there is also burning sensation in my feets & pain in my legs............do suggest wht is to be done...........
Know what you mean about the hep c (geno 1a) hitting hard after transplant. I did great for a year and a half (enzymes in the 20s, normal bilirubin-- all liver numbers normal) after my Jan. 2001 transplant and then my viral load shot up and enzymes stayed around 100 and bilirubin jumped to an average of 2.5-3.0.
Got to F2 fibrosis by June 2005, but now have "no significant fibrosis" per my biopsy taken during week 36 of treatment (150 mcg ped-intron and 1200 mg/daily riba), so my liver has benefited greatly from treatment so far. Now in week 48; undetectable at week 22 so I am going 72 weeks. Sides have been a pain but manageable.
I think immunosupression is increased a little during treatment. I have been lucky and have never had any sign of rejection in the three of four biopsies I've had post transplant and the one done during treatment.
Hope you do well on treatment. This board is a great source of information; lots and lots of help and good advice from the great people here. Love to see your enzymes go down, something that is pretty common even early in treatment.
Watch that treatment **** 18months after my very very successful transplant, my new liver showed stage1. My Dr. said getting on treatment early could stem the geno 1-b march and recover the stage 1 liver damage. Six months later I'm in a battle for my life with PTLD. Non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Its in my abs and in my brain. Simultanoius chemo and radiation treatment. Several near death deliveries to the hospital in coma. Watch that **** its poison.
Liver Transplantation in Hepatitis C Virus Patients - Outcomes, Antiviral Strategies, Detection and Immunosuppression
(http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/555660_3)
HCV is the single most common indication for liver transplantation in the US [15]. Recurrent HCV-related cirrhosis is accelerated in the immunosuppressed individual and develops in 8-44% of patients within 5-7 years [16].
The best strategy to prevent severe posttransplant recurrence of HCV is to eliminate the virus before transplantation. Antiviral therapy of HCV with interferon and ribavirin is, however, difficult to tolerate, and is associated with poor response rates in patients with decompensated cirrhosis [17]. The International Liver Transplant Society Consensus Conference suggested that patients with decompensated cirrhosis and a MELD score of less than 18 could be considered for antiviral therapy [18].
The mainstay of antiviral therapy for HCV after liver transplantation remains the combination of interferon and ribavirin. A recent systematic review of interferon-based combination antiviral therapy for HCV after liver transplantation showed pooled sustained viral response rates of 24% (95% confidence interval 20-27%) for regular interferon + ribavirin and 27% (95% confidence interval 23-31%) for pegylated interferon + ribavirin [19]. Discontinuation rates were 24-26%, although dose reductions were performed in up to 60%. No therapeutic advantages were seen for pegylated interferon as compared to regular interferon, as is seen in nontransplant HCV infection. More research is needed to evaluate the etiologies of this poor response with pegylated interferon after liver transplantation and to improve response rates/reduce the high relapse rates. Longer-term studies are lacking to see if the sustained responders have reduction in fibrosis over time. Trials of novel better tolerated antiviral agents (protease inhibitors) with and without interferon are needed in transplant patients in an attempt to improve the dismal outcomes associated with recurrent HCV disease.
Retransplantation of HCV-infected recipients continues to be debated. Retransplantation within 1 year of primary transplantation is associated with significantly reduced survival compared to later retransplants. In a retrospective study of 131 HCV-positive liver transplant recipients, the mean survival time from the time of retransplantation was 9.6
I treated and have been SVR since June 2004. It took me three treatment tries and the last one was for 73 weeks but it was worth it. I had rejections shortly after transplant but never during treatment and I treated for almost 3.5 years. I have read that rejection can occur as a result of interferon but I know several transplant recipients who've treated and none had any rejection problems. And some are SVR which is encouraging. Good luck, Mike
Do you mind me asking when you had your TP? Husbands enzymes and blood work has all be perfect and TP center wanted to wait till his hep started affecting things before they wanted to treat, but he insisted on doing it before. Rejection is their main concern with tx. BTW he is geno type 2, so on a short course, which is a blessing.
I wish you well
Mattie
Yes the hep was killing my new liver already stage 2 chriosis. Also my enzimes had elevated from 77 to 300 in 1 month. Hoping the tx will clear these problems up
Thanks for the concern
Are you showing any signs of rejection? Big fear for me. Before tx was the hcv affecting your new liver?
Be well
Mattie
I had a liver transplant in 2002. I am on tx now wk 20. Sx are usual, fatique,
rash, irritability (riba rage). They also depend on type of interferon, pegasys is usually easier on you than infergen.
I saw Dr a few days ago. His concern is the danger of rejection. Interferon busts the immune system and it may result in rejection. Hopefully you are seeing a good dr who will keep you on the right amount of antirejection. It is all individual.
Best of luck with your treatment. Jeff.
My husband had a liver transplant in Nov. '04 and started tx 2 weeks ago. So far, so good. No major complaints, the usual aches and pains. Couple of other people here with transplants also, Mike Simon being one.
Good luck and chin up
Mattie