Patient Celebrates the End of 13 Years of Dialysis with MMC’s 900th Organ Transplant
For the first time in nearly 13 years, Tandra Perkins of Urbana woke up and didn’t have to think about dialysis. It had been her routine three times a week, four hours at a time.
On June 10, the 44-year-old became the 900th patient to receive an organ transplant from The Alan G. Birtch, MD, Center for Transplant Services at Memorial Medical Center. The transplant program is a cooperative initiative between MMC, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine and Springfield Clinic.
“This milestone is another reminder of our privilege to be involved with a program that serves the needs of so many throughout central and southern Illinois,” said Marc Garfinkel, MD, surgical director of the transplant program and an associate professor with the SIU School of Medicine’s division of general surgery. “And now we’re looking forward to our 1,000th patient.”Garfinkel performed Perkins’ surgery.
Perkins and her husband, Michael, were watching a basketball game on TV on June 9 when the call came that a kidney was available. She had received two previous calls about the availability of a kidney, but neither of them worked out. Somehow, Perkins said, she knew this third time was going to work out.
“I was praying all the way to the hospital,” Perkins said, “thanking the Lord that I finally got my kidney.”
Perkins has three sisters and two brothers; one of the brothers is her twin. The majority of them still live in or near Evansville, Indiana, where Perkins was born and raised. While on dialysis, she could only take a short weekend trip, which was often exhausting for her. Now, she’s looking forward to being able to take an extended trip to see her siblings in a couple of months.