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TRANSPLANT BREAKTHROUGH RARE CROSS-FAMILY MATCH LEADS TO LIFE-SAVING KIDNEY SWAP, BONDS FAMILIES FOR LIFE AT UCLA HOSPITAL YOUNG DONORS UNABLE TO HELP OWN PARENT BUT GIVE ORGAN TO OTHER'S.


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 FARRELL AIDEM

Staff Writer

When her father needed a kidney transplant kidney transplant
 or renal transplant

Replacement of a diseased or damaged kidney with one from a living relative or a legally dead donor. The former's tissue type is more likely to match, reducing the chance of rejection; but removal puts the donor at risk,
, Tiffany Furuya stepped forward and offered one of her own.

And Jason Williams Jason Williams can refer to any of the following people:
  • Jason Williams (basketball) (also known as "White Chocolate") is currently a point guard for the Miami Heat.
, who admitted a rocky relationship with his stepmother, never hesitated when she, too, needed an organ donor organ donor Transplantation A person/cadaver that donates his/her  organ(s) to a recipient .

Disappointing news followed, though, when both learned their kidneys weren't matches. But in a heartwarming heart·warm·ing or heart-warm·ing  
adj.
1. Causing gladness and pleasure.

2. Eliciting sympathy and tender feelings: a heartwarming tale.

Adj. 1.
 twist for two seriously ill A patient is seriously ill when his or her illness is of such severity that there is cause for immediate concern but there is no imminent danger to life. See also very seriously ill.  patients, UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
 doctors found a surprising cross-match.

"By coincidence, Tiffany matched Jason's mother, and Jason matched Tiffany's father," said Dr. Jeffrey Veale, director of the paired kidney donation program at the University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising. , Medical Center.

The surgeries were performed Thursday, and all four patients are out of the hospital, facing lives touched by strangers in the first-ever "living donor kidney swap" at UCLA.

On Tuesday, amid hugs and some tears, the tale unfolded of strangers whose lives intertwined when Tiffany's kidney proved a match for Stella Williams and Jason's for Kazuyuki Furuya.

"He's my son, a son that I never had," said Kazuyuki, seated in a wheelchair but set for release from the hospital that afternoon.

"I'll take as many dads as I can have," Jason said. "He's a good guy."

Adding to the magic of the moment, doctors told of a cadaver kidney Cadaver kidney
A kidney from a brain-dead organ donor used for purposes of kidney transplantation.

Mentioned in: Nephrectomy
 that had become available for the elder Furuya, a 61-year-old software engineer, who had made his way to the top of the transplant waiting list.

It was 28-year-old Tiffany's decision to turn it down so a third victim of renal disease Renal disease
Kidney disease.

Mentioned in: Glycogen Storage Diseases

hypertension High blood pressure Cardiovascular disease An abnormal ↑ systemic arterial pressure, corresponding to a systolic BP of > 160 mm Hg
 could get a transplant. Acceptance would have dissolved the swap, though Tiffany said she would have donated her kidney to Stella either way.

"A lot of people would take that kidney and run," Veale said. "Tiffany said: 'No way. I don't want Mrs. Williams not to have a kidney.' This stranger out there who got that kidney is now eating pizza and traveling."

Idea is more swaps

About 5,000 people in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  and 16,000 statewide are awaiting kidney transplants. In 70 percent of those cases, donors have come forward, but their organs don't match. UCLA's kidney transplant team hopes this first local cross-match will ignite more living-donor swaps, Veale said.

"We hope this kind of program will develop across the city and *eventually the country to share kidneys," said Dr. Albin Gritsch, the program's surgical director.

Veale said the costs of the four surgeries hadn't been tabulated, but he noted that with living donors, expenses fall. Kazuyuki Furuya joked with reporters: "This is your tax dollars at its best."

Waiting for kidneys

It was tough for the Furuya family of Santa Clarita to watch Kazuyuki's reliance on grueling dialysis, a three- to four-hour, three-day-a-week treatment to remove waste from the bloodstream when the kidneys won't. With no donor on the horizon, Tiffany, an engineer, offered hers.

"My dad had been waiting for a kidney for almost six years," she said. "We saw his health decline. It was pretty difficult to watch him."

Stella Williams, 51, was just two months on dialysis after falling ill to kidney disease Kidney Disease Definition

Kidney disease is a general term for any damage that reduces the functioning of the kidney. Kidney disease is also called renal disease.
.

"I knew I couldn't do it the rest of my life," she said. "I felt like a prisoner. I felt my husband was a prisoner."

Her own daughter's kidney was a match, but the younger woman became pregnant and could not donate, so both Jason and his brother offered to help their stepmother.

"As soon as I heard about it, I just wanted to see what I could do," Jason said. "I knew she needed it more than I did."

Bonded for life

Stella, from Victorville, and Jason, 24, who lives in Upland and works in his father's construction business, spoke briefly of a rough relationship erased by their new bond. She hugged her stepson step·son  
n.
A spouse's son by a previous union.


stepson
Noun

a son of one's husband or wife by an earlier relationship

Noun 1.
 and fought back tears speaking of his gift to her that was waylaid to a man he had never met and how she is now living with Tiffany's organ.

"It's a big thing, it's a big decision he had to make," she said. "We've had a rough go of it, but we've both learned. He's grown into a wonderful man. He's someone we can rely on, be proud of. He gave of himself."

The two families, bonded for life by the sacrifices of their children, said they planned to keep in touch. Right now, however, the focus is on healing.

"I'm a little sore, but other than that I feel really good," Tiffany said, explaining the minimally invasive laproscopic surgery for donors. "It's pretty crazy. They took an organ out of me just a week ago, five days ago."

All but Kazuyuki Furuya are on their feet. Yet he joined his daughter and their new family in looking to a return to normal, saying, "I'd like to get on with the rest of my life."

pat.aidem(at)dailynews.com

(661) 257-5251

CAPTION(S):

2 photos

Photo:

(1 -- color) From left, Tiffany Furuya, 28, is seen with her father, Kazuyuki, 61, and Stella Williams with her stepson Jason, 24, at the UCLA Medical Center UCLA Medical Center is a hospital located on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California. It is rated as one of the top three hospitals in the United States and is the top hospital on the West Coast according to US News & World Report.  on Tuesday. In a life-saving swap, Tiffany and Jason donated kidneys to each other's parents.

(2) Stella Williams hugs Tiffany Furuya, who donated a kidney to her. Williams' stepson Jason, who wasn't a match for her, donated a kidney to Furuya's father, Kazuyuki, in a rare swap.

Tina Burch/Staff Photographer
COPYRIGHT 2007 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Sep 26, 2007
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