Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jul 2001 Source: The Post and Courier (SC) Copyright: 2001 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Lynne Langley MOM DOING BETTER AFTER TRANSPLANT Complications Hit After Giving Part Of Liver To Daughter Leisa Frye begged the doctors to take part of her liver and give it to her 17-year-old daughter, who was rapidly dying of liver failure after she mistakenly ate poisonous mushrooms. The first set of doctors said it wasn't an option. Brittany would have to stay on a waiting list. The second set, the liver transplant team at the Medical University of South Carolina, said they could do it but warned it entailed risks. "I said I didn't care. My main risk was losing my daughter," Frye said Thursday afternoon, just before she checked out of MUSC Medical Center. Brittany, who was released earlier this week, is doing well after the July 7 transplant. "I respect my life a lot more now," the Sumter high school graduate said. "I appreciate everything a lot more." She spent three days in a coma, and her mother had life-threatening complications after giving the right lobe of her liver. Brittany said, "I feel bad that she had to go through all this and the complications, but if she had to do it again, she probably would." Her mother smiled a confirmation. She never had a doubt, she said. "I was just so scared. I didn't have any hope that she would get a liver outside the family. People wait days and years." About 25 percent die waiting for a donor organ. If things go wrong in a live donor transplant, however, both the donor and the patient can die, pointed out Dr. Kenneth D. Chavin, who performed the surgery with Dr. Angello Lin. The roughly 11 hours of surgery represent the fifth live liver donor transplant at MUSC, one of less than 400 ever performed and the first due to mushroom poisoning. Half of liver failure patients die, Chavin said, and Brittany was declining rapidly. "We waited (for a donor organ) as long as we could," he said. "We were on the verge of not being able to do a transplant. Our hand was forced." Both transplant surgeries went well, but Frye developed a blood clot in the vessel that brings 80 percent of the blood to the liver and later had internal bleeding when a line was removed. Both complications threatened her life and required more surgery. Of her nearly three weeks in the hospital, Frye said, she remembers only the last seven days. Now, mother and daughter said, they can't wait to get home to Sumter. Frye's fiance, as well as Brittany's brother, sister and father have been here throughout the medical ordeal. Brittany became ill after going " 'shrooming" with friends, gathering and eating wild mushrooms that the teens thought would make them high. "I didn't know kids were doing it," Frye said. "Why in the world would you eat mushrooms out of a cow paddy?" Brittany told her mother only after she'd been treated in an emergency room, then continued getting sicker. Andrew Frye, her 16-year-old brother, said an unbelievable amount of teen-agers are using mushrooms because they're free and easy to obtain. Two friends who had been 'shrooming with her didn't get seriously sick and presumably didn't eat poisonous mushrooms. "They're not doing mushrooms any more. They're scared half to death," Brittany said. "I had a talk with another friend, and he's still doing it." Lakewood High School, from which Brittany graduated this year, is developing a mushroom awareness class and has asked her to speak, she said. Had her friends also eaten poisonous mushrooms and needed transplants, Chavin said, "Potentially three could have died instead of our having this happy ending." - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk