COVID-Damaged Lungs Replaced In double lung transplant After 93 Days On ECMO
USA: A man who endured the brutal early days of the COVID-19 pandemic and spent months on life support emerged from a perilous course of care when doctors concluded only a transplant could save him. After being transported to UNM Hospital and placed on an ECMO machine that temporarily replaced failing lung function, he flatlined multiple times and remained on the device for 93 days before clinicians were able to wean him. Persistent, irreversible damage left him dependent on the prospect of lung transplantation.
The patient’s medical team coordinated with the transplant specialists at Dignity Health St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, where a compatible donor was identified within two weeks of his arrival. In April 2020 he underwent a double lung transplant — one of the earliest such procedures in the country performed for post‑COVID fibrosis — and began the long path of recovery that followed the operation and critical care. He continues to return to Phoenix for annual transplant follow‑ups to monitor graft function and overall health.
Now five years out from that operation, his life shows dramatic change: ongoing survival and renewed family milestones, including a growing family and the chance to participate in celebrations once thought lost. The account underscores the intersection of cutting‑edge critical care (ECMO) and transplantation, the speed required to secure a donor match and the resilience of both patient and multidisciplinary teams. It also sits against the broader shadow of the pandemic’s human toll, symbolized by loved ones who did not survive, while highlighting how transplantation and coordinated institutional effort can offer a second chance when conventional therapy fails.
Video originally published on 2026-01-19 00:33:30
