Delhi women donate parts of livers to save each other\'s husband

Delhi women donate parts of livers to save each other's husband

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Two women gave a fresh lease of life to each other's husbands, who were suffering from "end-stage disease", through a swap transplant, doctors said Wednesday.

As part of the swap transplant, the two women gave portions of their livers to each other's husbands, they said.

Both the transplants were performed simultaneously within a span of 12 hours at Max Hospital, Saket.

A "living donor transplant" allows a living person to donate a section of their liver, which grows or regenerates to full size in the recipient (and the donor), the doctors said.

"The two patients from hail from different walks of life. Harminder Singh, and Yogesh Sharma, both 45 years old, had been suffering from end-stage disease for more than six months and were in desperate need of a in order to survive," the hospital said in a statement.

The wives of Singh and Sharma wanted to become the donors for them but the blood groups of the partners were "mutually incompatible", it said.

According to the statement, Singh's blood group is 'B', his wife Gurdeep Kaur's is 'A'. On the other hand, Sharma's blood group is 'A' and his wife Annu's is 'B'.

"After a detailed medical evaluation, including psychological assessment of both the donors and recipients, the couples were found to be ideal candidates for paired exchanged live donor liver transplants," the hospital said.

There are two ways of sourcing a liver for a transplant -- either from a cadaver or from a close relative, which is a challenge due to the growing concept of nuclear families in urban cities, the statement said.

Both the couples are now under close follow up and are doing well, the hospital said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 17 2019. 22:25 IST