A new lease on life
Elise Gee
NEWPORT BEACH--Getting her toenails painted red, white and blue is not
required as part of Inger Jessen’s training for the World Transplant
Games.
But it reflects her renewed joy for life since getting a new heart two
years ago.
Jessen, 57, began swimming at Newport Beach’s YMCA four months after
transplant surgery in 1997. In two weeks, she will fly to Budapest,
Hungary, to compete in the 12th World Transplant Games as one of 62
members on Team USA.
“I think it’s very important for the world to see how much we can do,”
said Jessen, a grandmother from Huntington Beach.
To really understand the magnitude of what she can do, one must
understand what she could not do before her operation.
Jessen suffered a heart attack in 1981 at age 39. Two years later, she
had double-bypass surgery. In 1985, she had an angioplasty. In 1991, she
had a triple bypass and a valve repair. In 1994, she had stint surgery.
“Then they said, ‘That’s it,”’ she said.
Her heart was beyond repair. She would need a transplant.
Jessen spent months at Hoag Hospital awaiting a heart. At her lowest
point, she could not walk from her car to the house without running out
of breath.
“When you can’t do anything--you can’t walk; you can’t lift anything--you
get kind of depressed,” Jessen said.
As Jessen recovered, her daughter, Rikke Hanson, began talking to some of
the clients who came into her nail salon. Among them was Costa Mesa
resident Phyllis Wolverton, who was taking a water aerobics class at the
Newport Beach YMCA.
“We kept bugging her; her daughter kept bugging her, and we finally got
her to the YMCA,” Wolverton said.
Now, Jessen trains 12 hours a week at the YMCA and at Golden West College
for the 50- and 100-meter breaststrokes. She has also relearned diving,
something she hasn’t done since she was a child.
“Just in the last four weeks I’ve seen major improvements,” said Mike
Ruffner, Jessen’s coach at Golden West College. “We decided we were going
to try to go for the gold.”
It was the heart transplant that made the real difference. All Jessen
knows about her donor is that he was a young man who had been in a car
accident, who had the same blood type and was about the same height and
weight.
She wonders if the new aversion to coffee she developed after the
transplant maybe has something to do with him, but it’s probably the
anti-rejection medication she’s taking, Jessen said.
She has tried writing to the man’s family to tell them how much his
donation has meant to her. Jessen’s son died at 30 from a similar heart
condition.
Jessen said that she hopes her participation in the World Transplant
games will raise awareness about the need for organ donations. Last year
there were 20,961 transplants in the United States, the United Network
for Organ Sharing said. But an estimated 61,000 more people are waiting
for a transplant, it said.
Barbara Eklund, the nurse who heads the Transplant Clinic and Support
Group at Hoag Hospital, has seen the way the quality of life for Jessen
and other patients has improved.
Many potential donors are people who have been in accidents. They walk
out the door in the morning thinking they’ll be back but never make it,
Ekland said.
“One good thing that can come out of that tragedy is a 10-year-old can
get a new heart; a 50-year-old with grandchildren on the way could get a
new liver; a Cystic Fibrosis patient could get a new lung,” she said.
Or someone like Jessen can just get a new lease on life.
Jessen said she has started to do things now, just because she can.
“There’s no excuse any longer to just sit there,” she said.
swimmer
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