The hospital in Chennai claimed it to be the longest distance haul of donated lung in the country.
A 22-year-old woman was declared brain dead at the Ruby Hall Clinic in Pune after she sustained a head injury due to a fall on August 16.
Her husband agreed to donate her organs, following which one of her lungs was harvested and flown from Ruby Hall Clinic in Pune to Gleneagles Global Hospital in Chennai yesterday and transplanted successfully into a patient.
"Upon receiving an alert about suitable lung available at Pune's Ruby Hall Clinic, our team rushed to the city and after initial assessment, found the lung to be suitable for the patient, who is suffering from end-stage lung disease and awaiting her chance for a donor for transplantation," Dr Sandeep Attawar of the Chennai-based hospital said.
He said one of the lungs of the donor was harvested at around 1.30 am yesterday and rushed to the Pune airport by road. The flight carrying the organ and the transplant team landed at the Chennai airport at around 4.30 am.
Meanwhile, the woman's heart was yesterday transported by road to Fortis Hospital at Mulund in Mumbai, through a green corridor by covering 143 kms in 1.49 hours.
The heart was then transplanted into a 24-year-old college student from suburban Ghatkopar, who was suffering from a heart ailment and had been on the wait list since May, a release issued by the Fortis Hospital said.
Besides, the family of a 45-year-old woman, who died in MGM Hospital at Vashi in Navi Mumbai, also agreed to donate her organs.
The second heart transplant in the hospital was carried out nearly four hours after the heart transported from Pune was transplanted into another patient, it said.
Dr Anvay Mulay, the head of cardiac transplant team in Fortis Hospital, said, "Our teams, medical social workers and nursing units worked with the donor hospitals to retrieve the hearts and also worked in tandem with the civic authorities to transport it to the OT (operation theatre) in record time."
Mulay also expressed hope that with the numbers of the cadaveric donations climbing, they would be able to help more such end-stage organ failure patients.
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