| |
Family Services
Recipient Stories
Rita Zeidner (sports medicine patient)
In early 2002, Rita Zeidner, a journalist from Arlington, Va., was limping
along and recovering slowly from reconstructive knee surgery. She had torn her
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) after falling on an icy ski trail in Colorado.
During Rita’s first visit to the orthopedist, she was devastated to hear that a
damaged ACL doesn’t heal. But, she says, her spirits improved when she learned
that many injured athletes had returned to their sport after having new tissue
transplanted in their damaged knees.
Rita’s doctor offered her two recovery options. He said he could take healthy
tissue from her leg, reshape it into a new ligament and stitch it into her bad
knee. Or he could perform a similar procedure using allograft tissue recovered
from a deceased person. For the same result, the allograft option would be less
painful and result in a shorter recovery.
"Given the alternatives, I made what seemed the more rational decision to
receive an ACL from a tissue donor," says Rita.
Today, Rita says she is back to her old self and owes a large part of her
recovery to Bob Jones, a man she never had
the privilege of knowing but learned about while researching an article on knee
injuries for the Washington Post.
Bob’s life had come to an end in the early hours of January 1, 2002 (Bob’s
story is located on the donor stories page). He and his wife, Kathy, had spent
New Year’s Eve with their daughter and were driving back to their home in
Dixon, Ill., when a drunk driver rear-ended their car at full speed.
"Lucky for me, Kathy was well aware of Bob’s thoughts on the tissue issue,"
says Rita. "Only six months before his death, she had needed an allograft after
tearing her ACL in an on-the-job accident. She knew that her husband would have
been pleased to see the favor returned."
Rita says that ligaments taken from Bob’s leg were just what the doctor
ordered.
"It was a painful and slow process," says Rita. "However, I can only imagine
how much more difficult my recovery would have been if my doctor had to perform
the reconstruction using my own tissue. But 18 months after my accident and a
year after I’d begun to fear I’d never be able to return to my old activities,
me and my knee are doing great."
|
|
|