I was 'brought back from the dead' and survived more than 200 surgeries by the age of 25

  • 2 years ago
A woman who endured more than 200 surgeries has a new lease of life thanks to a heart and liver transplant - but had to be "brought back from the dead" after the op. Jessica Manning, 29, was born with heart disease and half a heart and had to have open heart surgery at just five days old. Aged 18, she had surgery to fix a hole in her aorta but then started to suffer with palpitations and her lungs collapsed, leaving her so weak she couldn't tie her own shoelaces. She found herself with heart and liver failure aged 22 and her only hope of survival was a double transplant. A donor was found in the nick of time, as doctors told her she hardly had a heartbeat, and she was taken for the 20-hour operation on September 2018. Jessica lost 22 units of blood during the procedure and was in a coma for five days before suffering a cardiac arrest four weeks after her transplant. She had to have her heart manually massaged for 20 minutes to bring her back to life and was in a coma for a further three days before she was stable enough to start her recovery. Jessica had to learn to walk again and was on kidney dialysis for five months before she was finally able to come home after 88 days in Auckland City Hospital, New Zealand, and has been able to get her life back. Jessica, who is studying to be a primary school teacher, from Auckland, New Zealand, said: “I’ve been able to get my life back. “I’ve survived over 200 minor surgeries and six major operations since I was born. “At 19 I was so weak I couldn’t tie my shoelaces or do anything for myself - now I can. “I’m so grateful to my donor and their family for giving me a new chance at life.” Jessica was born with six different heart defects and had to have open heart surgery at five months old in January 1994, followed by a reconstruction when she was three in July 1996. The hole in her heart was closed when she was six years old, and she was monitored while she was growing up. “I was OK for the next few years, but they then started to spot I had a hole in my aorta,” Jessica said. “It got too big when I was 18 that they had to operate to make sure it didn’t cause a cardiac arrest.” Jessica had her aorta fixed in April 2012 but started to have heart palpitations following the surgery and had a pacemaker fitted. Suddenly in July 2012, her lungs collapsed, and Jessica was admitted to Auckland City Hospital where she had her lungs drained. “I was told I was going into heart failure too and had liver cirrhosis,” she said. “They realised I needed a heart and liver transplant.” Jessica was put on the list in April 2017 and had to wait 16 months before there was a match. “I went from 20 percent heart function to hardly a heartbeat - it sounded like hiccups,” she said. “I was so sick - I had 24-hour care. “I couldn’t be independent at all. “It was really tough at 25 to have no life for myself.” Finally in September 2018, Jessica went for her double transplant, with both the liver and heart coming from the same donor. “It took 20 hours, and I lost a lot of blood,” she said. “I was in a coma for five days and when I came round, I couldn’t even lift a finger.” Four weeks into her recovery, Jessica went into cardiac arrest and had to have her heart massaged to bring her back to life. She was in a coma for a following three days before she came back around and has now made a miraculous recovery. “I had to learn to walk again and had kidney dialysis for five months,” Jessica said. “But now I’ve not had to go back to hospital again. “Before all I had known was a life of being sick – that was my normal. “I’ve had to adjust to life but now I’m studying to be a teacher and I can do everything for myself. “I’m so thankful to my donor and their family. “All I know about the donor is she was a woman in her 50s who had passed away from a stroke. “I’ve written letters to her family, and they can choose whether they would like to respond.”

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