• New here? Register here now for access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Plus, stay connected and follow BP on Instagram @buckeyeplanet and Facebook.

Damn selfish self-absorbed athletes!

BuckeyeInTheBoro

This space left intentionally blank
I bet he never even stopped to consider how this might affect IUPUI's fans!


http://www.theindychannel.com/news/5228149/detail.html?subid=22100444&qs=1;bp=t
Athlete To Interrupt Season, Donate Marrow To Stranger
POSTED: 10:16 pm EST November 1, 2005

<!--startindex-->INDIANAPOLIS -- IUPUI basketball player Maushae Byles doesn't know the woman with whom he's about to share his bone marrow, but he knows enough to be willing to skip part of his senior season for her.
Byles, a fifth-year senior and starting guard, will donate his bone marrow at the end of this month, hoping to extend the life of a stranger in Minnesota.
"If I can be the person that can save (her), then I'd like to do it," Byles told RTV6's Jake Query.
Byles was told that a Minnesota woman is dying and that his bone marrow can save her. He doesn't know her name, age or ailment.


<CENTER><HR>
video.gif
Video: IUPUI Guard Explains Decision <HR></CENTER>
Byles was identified as a match after he donated blood two years ago.
"She went through (her) whole family and no one in the family matched. My name came up and I was a match, so I ... agreed to the terms to do a bone marrow transplant," Byles said.
Ron Hunter, head coach of IUPUI's men's basketball team, said he backed Byles' decision.
"We don't want to interrupt this at all ... and if Maushae is willing and his family said that it's OK, then I think it's just tremendous," Hunter said.
IUPUI's first exhibition game is Saturday, and its regular season begins Nov. 18. Byles doesn't know when he'll be able to return to the team after the bone marrow procedure, but he said basketball is secondary in this circumstance.
"This may be one of my things from God to do," Byles said. "God might have put me here to save somebody's life, so I feel it's a good thing to do."
Byles said he plans to meet the woman after both recover from the procedure. He said he'd also like to have her come to an IUPUI game. <!--stopindex-->
 
My brother has leukemia and I was tested to be a bone marrow donor for him. I was a 4/6 match. They really wanted a 6/6 match.

He seems to be doing well and no longer needs the transplant, but I'd be there tonight if he needed me.

While I was being tested, a nurse told me that she has so many people test and come up a match for a family member, only to chicken out of the process and the family member dies because the potential donor was afraid of the pain.

I'd never be able to live with myself if I had the means to save Ken's life but chickened out of the procedure.
 
Upvote 0
My brother has leukemia and I was tested to be a bone marrow donor for him. I was a 4/6 match. They really wanted a 6/6 match.

He seems to be doing well and no longer needs the transplant, but I'd be there tonight if he needed me.

While I was being tested, a nurse told me that she has so many people test and come up a match for a family member, only to chicken out of the process and the family member dies because the potential donor was afraid of the pain.

I'd never be able to live with myself if I had the means to save Ken's life but chickened out of the procedure.
I don't know much about it... is it very painful for the donor? Long recovery? I got the impression from this article that this guy would be out a while.
 
Upvote 0
Its painful, but no where near as bad as it is for the recipient.

Most of the time, when a person receives an organ (insert joke here) the body tries to reject it. So they need major meds to resist that.

When you get a bone marrow transplant, it rejects you. Once it starts to take hold, it becomes the host and tries to reject your body. Very miserable stuff.

They told my brother that if he needed it, he would ahve to move to Gainesville to be closer to Shand's Hospital for daily check ups for about four months after his two month stay in the ICU.
 
Upvote 0
They said the player was identified as a match from a blood donation. Is it normal to have donated blood tested for a possible donor match? I donate blood all the time, and I've never heard of that.
 
Upvote 0
He's on Glevic and it is doing a great job of controlling it. His white blood cell count is normal and his Spleen shrunk back to normal size, about the size of your fist. When they diagnosed him, it was the size of a football.
 
Upvote 0
They said the player was identified as a match from a blood donation. Is it normal to have donated blood tested for a possible donor match? I donate blood all the time, and I've never heard of that.

You have to donate specifically for bone marrow donating for it to be tested that way.

I encourage people to make a point to get tested. Our bone marrow database in this country is very, very weak. We could be saving lives. Lots of them.
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top