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Savona, N.Y. — Some would say it is a miracle that this man is alive. After a serious heart attack, a stroke and a heart transplant, Jon O’Dell, 49, of Hornell is finally on the road to recovery.
On a hot August day in 2009, O’Dell stumbled into the dell Latitude CPX battery house after he and his son did some work in their yard. His wife, Dawn, thought he was joking around, but when he fell she knew something was seriously wrong.
He was having a myocardial infarction, or a heart attack, which killed the left side of his heart.
O’Dell was taken to the Emergency Room in Arnot Ogden Medical Center by his wife, then transferred for emergency surgery in Elmira. O’Dell was then fitted with an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation dell Inspiron 2500 battery machine to keep him alive while being transported to Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester.
About a day after his heart attack, O’Dell had surgery to install the Left Ventricular Assist Device. This dell Inspiron 4100 battery structure was implanted and worked for the left side of his heart, which was no longer functioning.
Only the right side of his heart could function, giving him a half-regular heartbeat accompanied by what sounded like a vacuum, as Dawn O’Dell described. Although it was strange, the family learned as much as they could about the device.
A few days after the surgery to install dell Inspiron 4100 battery the LVAD, O’Dell had a stroke on the left side of his brain.
Doctors were unsure if he would use the right side of his body again, but while sedated to keep his heart at rest he began to move his right leg. When he awoke, he had use of his right side and the only effect of the stroke was some difficulty finding words.
He returned from the hospital dell Inspiron 8100 battery in September 2009, but was forced to go back in October for gall bladder removal. The organ had been damaged during O’Dell’s heart attack.
Life slowly became more regulated, but not without hardship. O’Dell was still living on the LVAD, a device that is battery operated. This meant O’Dell had to always carry extra batteries dell Inspiron 8000 battery throughout the day and be plugged in at night in order to stay alive. Without the machine, O’Dell would die.
While relying on the LVAD, his life was extremely restricted. He was not allowed to drive, and the entire family had to be trained to replace batteries, never leaving O’Dell by himself.
He stayed on this machine for dell Inspiron 8200 battery nearly two years. Meanwhile, O’Dell went back to work for the VA in March 2010, finally having some independence back although he was living with a restrictive device.
In June of that year, he went through intensive medical testing in order to get on the heart transplant list. By November, he had developed an infection on some of the tubing of his dell Latitude CPi battery LVAD, which put his name at the top of the list.
He was on the transplant waiting list for a total of eleven months. On May 14, 2011, his wife answered the phone and was told to be in Rochester within two hours for O’Dell’s heart transplant. A donor had been matched to O’Dell, whose life was about to change forever.
As he went in, he took the situation as a win-win reality. “I was either going to live because I had a new heart or I would go to heaven, so it was win-win for me,” he said. “That really made the kids angry,” he added, because they were anxious about the long surgery.
His wife had been dell G5266 battery especially anxious for her husband of 30 years, but looked to her faith and support from their two sons, Sean and Patrick to cope, as she had since O’Dell’s heart attack.
During the transplant, there were complications, though not deriving from his “new” heart. The infection along the tubin of the LVAD caused excessive bleeding.
The surgical team never gave up, even using 60 bags of blood to keep O’Dell alive.
He made it out and became an inspiration for dell G5260 battery the medical team. “They told me they had never seen anyone [survive so much],” said O’Dell.
Since the successful transplant, he has had seven biopsies to test for rejection of the heart, and all tests were clear of negative signs. Although it is a long road with 17 pill medications and 2 injections daily, O’Dell is well on the way to recovery.
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