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Brain-Dead Boy Gives Life To Woman With Rare Heart Disease

Heart was successfully transplanted after being transported from Thiruvananthapuram by a Naval Air Ambulance.
Hand giving a heart to another.
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Hand giving a heart to another.

A teenager who was declared brain-dead following a road accident gave life to a 27-year-old woman suffering from a rare disease as his heart was successfully transplanted in her after being transported from Thiruvananthapuram by a Naval Air Ambulance here on Tuesday.

A team of doctors at the Lisie Hospital here claimed that they have successfully transplanted the heart in Sandhya of Thrissur who was suffering from a rare heart disease.

"Surgery is a success," a hospital spokesperson said after the five-hour-long transplantation surgery.

Vishal, 15, from Mukkola in Thiruvananthapuram, had suffered severe head injury after he was hit by a speeding car on July 16, when he was his way school. He was admitted to Thiruvananthapuram Government Medical College where he was declared brain dead on Monday evening.

When officials in Kerala government's Mrithasanjeevani, Kerala Network of Organ Sharing, contacted members of Vishal's family, they agreed to donate his organs, including heart, liver and kidneys.

While his heart was brought to Kochi hospital, kidneys were donated to two patients at Thiruvananthapuram Medical College.

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan intervened to arrange the Naval air ambulance to transport the organs to ensure that they reach the recipients in time.

Ernakulam District Collector M G Rajamanickyam on Monday forwarded a request to Headquarters, Southern Naval Command (HQSNC) for transportation of the harvested heart from Thiruvananthapuram to Kochi via air. Accordingly, four doctors of Lisie Hospital were airlifted by an IN Dornier from INS Garuda to Thiruvananthapuram at 6.30 AM on Tuesday.

The medical team along with the harvested heart returned to INS Garuda, Kochi around 1 PM.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.