Contact us
If you would like to learn more or if you are ready to make an appointment, please call our team.
The lives of two patients鈥攐ne a baby, one a retired physician鈥攃rossed paths in the most unexpected way in the summer of 2017, when a single organ donor helped save both their lives at once.
Noah Hernandez, born in February 2017, and James Howell, MD, born in 1955, had never met, but both were facing life-threatening health conditions caused by liver disorders. Noah had been born healthy, but by his 4-month pediatric appointment, he was beginning to look yellowish, a condition associated with jaundice. After being admitted to his local hospital in Sacramento, a CT scan and liver biopsy indicated a problem with Noah鈥檚 bile ducts that was preventing his liver from draining properly鈥攁 condition called biliary atresia. That鈥檚 when he was transferred to Lucile Packard Children鈥檚 Hospital Stanford.
鈥淲ith biliary atresia, no one really knows what the cause is,鈥 says Carlos O. Esquivel, MD, PhD, Chief of the Division of Abdominal Transplantation at Stanford University School of Medicine and Director of the聽Liver Transplant Program at Lucile Packard Children鈥檚 Hospital Stanford. Most patients, he says, get an operation, called a Kasai, which attempts to get drainage of the liver. 鈥淚n some children, it works and then they get better; but in some children, this procedure fails,鈥 says Dr. Esquivel. 鈥淭heir only chance for survival is liver transplant. And that was the case with Noah.鈥
Noah was placed on the waiting list for a donor liver. His parents, Alyssa and Reymon, understood it could be a long wait, because pediatric livers aren鈥檛 often available. 鈥淭hey can鈥檛 tell you how long you鈥檒l wait,鈥 says Alyssa. 鈥淭hey preferred to have an infant-sized liver, and felt that Noah was well enough that they could be picky and wait for the perfect liver.鈥
Noah soon began experiencing unusually high levels of ascites鈥攁n abnormal buildup of fluid in his abdomen. 鈥淣ormally it鈥檚 there in the stomach,鈥 says Alyssa, 鈥淏ut Noah had it only along his Kasai incision. 鈥淚t was so bad that it kept getting bigger and bigger to the point that his entire right side was bulging out. He couldn鈥檛 sleep any more, wasn鈥檛 comfortable. He would just cry.鈥
Alyssa, who had stayed awake at her son鈥檚 side, was sent home to get some sleep. While she was gone, Noah started having trouble breathing. She rushed back to the hospital, where Noah had been transferred to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, and placed on life support. 鈥淭hose were absolutely the worst days,鈥 Alyssa says. Fearing the worst, she immediately called her husband, and also her pastor, to come right away. Noah was baptized that evening, on August 23.
Because of how sick he was, Noah鈥檚 position on the organ waiting list was moved up to the highest urgency, meaning he would get the first liver available. The paradox of organ transplant, however, is that the sicker a patient is, the higher they go on the organ waiting list; but a patient can be too sick to undergo transplant surgery, making them ineligible for organ donation. 鈥淒r. Esquivel said they were doing everything in their power to prep Noah to get a liver,鈥 Alyssa says. 鈥淭hat night, at about 9:30, we received the call.鈥 A donor match was available鈥攐nly it was not a pediatric liver, but one from an older teenager who had died tragically.
Almost 15 years earlier, in 2003, James Howell, MD, a retired physician in the South Bay, was diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver. Cirrhosis is an irreversible liver disease that can be the beginning of other complications and diseases of the liver, including a 5 to 10 percent chance of developing cancer, which Dr. Howell was later diagnosed with. 鈥淚 was just extraordinarily lucky to keep my cancer with only liver involvement,鈥 he says.
鈥淥nce the tumor in the liver gets large enough, they can treat that by ablation,鈥 Howell explains. 鈥淭hey put a probe into my liver and zapped it. I went through that procedure twice over two years. But the ablation was only buying time. I had two fatal illnesses going on at the same time. It was just a weight on my shoulders, just a burden that I felt every day.鈥
When his cancer came back for the third time, Dr. Howell was put on the waiting list for a liver. 鈥淚鈥檇 been cruising along, all things considered, keeping my ascites under control, strict dieting, staying with my medicines,鈥 Howell says. 鈥淚 was getting prepared to go in for another scan of my liver, when all of a sudden I got a call at about 10 o鈥檆lock at night.鈥 Howell explained that they described the quality and condition of the liver. 鈥淭hey give you a little profile of it,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd it was almost too good to be true. It was like a gift from god, and from that family.鈥
Dr. Esquivel was among the first surgeons to do transplants in children鈥攅specially tiny babies鈥攁nd has been doing them for nearly three decades. When the industry advanced to using split-livers, it was a leap that made sense, he says, because of the difficulty in finding pediatric donors.
鈥淏ecause of the shape of the liver, it is common to split it between recipients of varying ages,鈥 says Dr. Esquivel. 鈥淭he anatomy of the liver is such that what we call the right lobe amounts to about two-thirds of the entire liver volume. So, let鈥檚 say it鈥檚 a three-pound liver: the adult will get about two and half pounds, and the child one-half pound.鈥
But transplanting an adult-sized liver into an infant is still a complex procedure. 鈥淭he blood vessels are more of a mismatch, because they are adult-sized,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 child who is only a few months old鈥攖heir blood vessels are tiny.鈥
Noah was prepped for surgery around 8:30 the next morning, August 24. 鈥淭hey told us it would take about 8 to 10 hours,鈥 Alyssa says. 鈥淲hen it was done in seven and a half, that just blew our minds.鈥 Clark Andrew Bonham, MD, associate professor of surgery, performed the removal of Noah鈥檚 liver, while Dr. Esquivel would transplant Noah鈥檚 new liver. At the same time, Dr. Bonham also performed the transplant of the new liver for James Howell.
鈥淚 woke up the next day and thought they had not done the transplant,鈥 recalls Dr. Howell. 鈥淚 had absolutely no pain.鈥 The surgeons soon came in to tell Dr. Howell everything had gone well. He made a quick recovery, which he attributes to the constant support of his wife, Denise, and a round-the-clock team of nurses who were 鈥渁bsolutely incredible,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey were the most awesome human beings I have ever met.鈥 For his surgeons, and the entire transplant team, he felt equal appreciation. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 say enough about the people who took care of me,鈥 he added. 鈥淭hey were just awesome鈥 skilled, compassionate, and caring. It made a huge difference for me, obviously.鈥
Dr. Howell went home just five days after his surgery.
Recovery was rockier for Noah, who stayed in the hospital for two more months. The transplant itself was successful, but the difficulty he鈥檇 had keeping his ascites low before transplant worsened afterward. 鈥淭he fluid started going around his lungs, and then into them,鈥 says Alyssa. Noah needed surgery to place, and later re-place, a chest tube to drain the fluid, and also needed a respirator to support his breathing.
Alyssa recalls the day that Dr. Esquivel stopped by Noah鈥檚 bedside and advised taking him off all fluids, because they worsened ascites. Noah was also on diuretics and other medications to balance his fluid retention. 鈥淚 adjusted his medications,鈥 recalls Dr. Esquivel, 鈥渁nd it worked.鈥 Noah鈥檚 ascites were gone within a week. 鈥淚t was definitely a turning point,鈥 says Dr. Esquivel. 鈥淣oah began to look happy and more like a normal child.鈥
鈥淭he man is a miracle worker,鈥 Alyssa says of Dr. Esquivel. A few weeks later, the Hernandez family left the hospital, stayed nearby at the Ronald McDonald House for a few weeks while Noah was still under observation, and then went home to Sacramento in early November, 2017. 鈥淲e were so happy to be out of the hospital and to be a family again,鈥 Alyssa says.
Now home, Noah is thriving. 鈥淗e鈥檚 doing great,鈥 says Alyssa. 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 be happier. He鈥檚 now at 60th percentile for weight. His medications have been cut in half, and he鈥檚 eating like crazy.鈥 Noah is also getting ready to crawl, and loves dancing every time Elmo comes on Sesame Street. 鈥淗e鈥檚 just a very happy, active baby.鈥
Dr. Esquivel agrees, 鈥淣ow he has as good a chance as any other kid to have a normal life.鈥
Meanwhile, Dr. Howell is getting back to enjoying his retirement, eating whatever he likes and taking time to enjoy the simple things in life. 鈥淚 think a lot about the bravery and the courage of the donor family, for allowing their loved one to donate the organ that changed two lives immensely,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why he was on the earth for such a short time, but I鈥檓 truly grateful.鈥
You can help patients who are currently waiting for a life-saving transplant by registering as an organ, eye and tissue donor. For more information or to register, visit or register in-person at your local DMV.
Connect with us:
Download our App: