Just in case you didn’t know I volunteering to be placed on the National Bone Marrow Register. About a month ago I was asked to come for some type-testing to check my compatibility to a patient. Well I’ve just had a phone call telling me they would like for me to make my donation a few days before Christmas.
Yay! (I guess.)
So here’s your chance to ask some questions, which I will be hapy to ask the doctor when I go for a consultation next weekend.
Are there any burning questions on bone marrow donation?
Maybe you’d like to ask me a question about the events leading up to this?
Initial testing and compatibility testing is done via a blood sample - so no pain at all. I never passed the second compatibility test so thats as far as my experience goes
How long were you on? Is this the first match you’ve had? Are they taking your marrow or doing the blood thing that looks like apheresis? And after you’ve done it, I really want to know if it hurts.
They take a number of blood samples, like OaOW has said. The initial testing was taken during a blood donation, just the little tube full. The compatibility stage was a bit more. I was meant to have 4 samples but they took 6 because of a short supply of the larger tubes. Each sample is colour coded for different tests. I hurts as much as any blood donation. One prick and that’s it.
I’ve been on the list since February. It is my first match so I guess I’m pretty lucky. The co-ordinator has told me I am doing the apheresis thing, which is when they pump me full of drugs for a week then drain my blood. (Maybe a little over over-the-top). I did want to do the day in hospital and I’ll ask if I can. That way it’s all over, and although I’ll be sore, I’ll be home for the holidays so there is the family to help me recover.
As for the hurting are you asking from a worried sense or a deep rooted sado-masochism?
A cousin of mine donated marrow a couple years ago. I saw her 3 days after the marrow was removed and she was still in pain and discomfort. She said it felt like someone had kicked her repeatedly in the hips and legs. She had 4 incisions about 3/4 of an inch long, one on each hip and one on the back of each leg a few inches above the knee. Her compensation for the ordeal was enough for sizeable down payment on a new Dodge Dakota she wanted and she says it was worth it. The recipient of her marrow has been in remission for over a year and the docs say she should have a good long life. The recipient was only 14 at the time of the transplant.