30th anniversary of Scotland’s first heart transplant service – Glasgow Times

Posted: Published on December 17th, 2021

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

IT is 30 years to the day since the first heart transplant service was founded in Scotland.

And one grateful recipient is looking forward to his own 30th birthday, a milestone he's reaching thanks to the gift of a new heart in 2018.

The service began at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary on December 16, 1991 before the countrys first historic heart transplant was carried out on January 2, 1992.

Since then, 445 lives have been saved through the service following the gift of life from donors and their families.

Of that figure, 281 transplants were carried out in the Glasgow hospital, while 164 have been performed at NHS Golden Jubilee in Clydebank since the service moved there in 2008.

Patient Euan Bisset turns 30 on December 26 thanks to a life-saving heart transplant in 2018.

Euan, a keen mountain bike racer, worked as a welder for his familys company before his operation.

He was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy and cardiomyopathy in 2009 and received an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) in 2015.

His condition worsened severely until he was told he would need a new heart in 2018 and he was admitted to the National Services Division (NSD) ward at the Golden Jubilee on the urgent list.

Euan said: I was really lucky, I only had to wait about four weeks after I went on the urgent list and I just remember being wheeled away and I didnt wake up until 11 days later because there were complications.

Im doing really good now. I think this year is the first time since 2018 that Ive not spent time in any hospital, apart from check-ups. Ive had some problems but my heart feels perfect.

Its a miracle to still be alive and Im just really grateful.

"Emotionally, its hard knowing that someone died for me to be alive, but its comforting knowing thats what they wanted, and I know that if circumstances were different, I would do the same.

I want my donors family to know that their loss has turned into something positive by saving my life and with my new heart I try my very best every day to make it count.

Theatre Co-ordinator Hazel Colquhoun is vastly experienced in cardiac services serving in many senior roles over the past 30 years.

She played a leading role in the first Scottish team that went to the specialist Harefield Hospital in Uxbridge to learn how to retrieve organs for transplantation in Scotland in the set-up stage.

Hazel said: I always liked doing things that were unpredictable. In cardiac surgery I dont know what Im going to do that day because it changes so much, but Ill know what Ive done at the end of the day.

I remember the first transplant when it was done as our team went out through the night and I actually still have our off-duty book for that day.

Its a special thing. When I first did retrieval you wouldnt know anything at all about the person whose organ you are retrieving, but thats all changed and you know the circumstances now, which I think makes the process much better."

The highly skilled transplant team has been resilient throughout the Covid-19 pandemic and has carried out 41 heart transplants over that period, overcoming difficulties to ensure the high level of safety and patient care was maintained.

Hazel added: Its good for us to have the Retrieval Programme here at NHS Golden Jubilee giving us involvement in the whole transplantation journey.

The team has done a lot over the last few years, going into covid hospitals in full PPE now, working through this pandemic amazing well, with the on-call team doing a large amount of transplants.

The team has worked extremely hard and within teams like this its like having a second family you are so close to each other.

NHS Golden Jubilee Consultant Cardiologist in Advanced Heart Failure and Cardiac Transplantation, Dr Jane Cannon, said: A lot has changed in the world of cardiac transplantation over the past 30 years.

As technology evolves, so too does our clinical practice. One example of this would be the development of the Organ Care System (OCS) which is a medical device used in the transportation of donor hearts.

It allows the organ to be transported for longer distances. Rather than the traditional method of preserving an organ through cold storage, this perfuses the blood of the donor through the heart at a temperature more similar to the human body.

In Scotland especially, this allows us a wider access to donor organs from all over the UK - as the heart can travel safely from further afield.

As well as surgical advances, there have also been advances in transplant medicine.

All in all, it has been a very positive journey for cardiac transplantation over the past 30 years and we look forward to an exciting next 30 years.

The rest is here:
30th anniversary of Scotland's first heart transplant service - Glasgow Times

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