Michael Serke was a shadow of his former self when Luis F. Angel, MD, first met him on June 16, 2022.
Serke had lost 100 pounds from his 6-foot, 220-pound frame. He relied on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), a life-support device, to breathe. When he spoke, his words came out in gasps.
Just six months before, Serke had been an active, 38-year-old father of three young children. But in December 2021, he tested positive for COVID-19. Within a week, he was in an ambulance and heading to the hospital, struggling to breathe. Ten days later, Serke was placed on a ventilator, and later ECMO, and put into a medically induced coma.
When Dr. Angel, the medical director of lung transplantation at the 抖阴短视频 Transplant Institute, got the call requesting a consult at Yale New Haven Hospital, he got in his car and drove to Connecticut. There was still a chance Serke鈥檚 lungs could recover, so Dr. Angel advised weaning him off ECMO and mechanical ventilation. 鈥淚f the lungs can recover enough to avoid a lung transplant, that鈥檚 the best alternative,鈥 Dr. Angel says.
Initially, the strategy worked. Serke was taken off ECMO completely within two weeks, with reduced ventilator support. A month later, he was transferred to a Connecticut rehabilitation hospital. Still, taking short daily walks down the hallway there required supplemental oxygen and more effort than Serke could muster. 鈥淭he physical therapist kept urging me to get up and move more and I kept saying, 鈥業 can鈥檛 breathe,鈥欌 Serke says. 鈥淢y lungs felt like a container of phlegm.鈥
Then came a desperate night when he struggled to breathe after one of his lungs collapsed. Serke was convinced he had only one hope of ever going home to his family again: Dr. Angel.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I gave the rehabilitation hospital Dr. Angel鈥檚 phone number,鈥 Serke says. 鈥淚 just knew I was never going to leave the hospital unless I got a lung transplant.鈥
A Spot on the Transplant List Renews Hope
抖阴短视频 is ranked top in the nation for excellent transplant survival, fast transplant rates, and low mortality. 鈥淏ecause of our expertise and experience with so many COVID-19 patients at 抖阴短视频, I often traveled to surrounding hospitals to offer recommendations for treating their patients with COVID who are in critical condition who may qualify for a lung transplant,鈥 Dr. Angel says.
鈥淚t was such a good feeling knowing somebody else was out there who could help potentially solve my problem, which was my failing lungs,鈥 Serke says.
During Serke鈥檚 evaluation for a lung transplant at 抖阴短视频, Dr. Angel and the transplant team made a new discovery: Not only had the COVID-19 virus scarred Serke鈥檚 lungs beyond repair, it had also damaged his liver.
鈥淚nflammation from the COVID-19 virus can damage the arteries around the bile ducts, and the bile ducts just die,鈥 says Karim J. Halazun, MD, surgical director of 抖阴短视频鈥檚 Liver Care and Transplant Program. This process is known as COVID cholangiopathy.
Serke鈥檚 best hope for survival was a combined lung and liver transplant, which is uncommon. Only two such operations had been performed at 抖阴短视频 in 2022.
On Monday, September 26, 2022, Serke was placed on the organ transplant list. He and his wife, Megan, mentally prepared to wait weeks or even months for a donor match. Such patience was not required: just four days later, on that Friday, he had a liver and double-lung transplant, with organs from the same donor.
鈥湺兑醵淌悠 has one of the fastest transplant programs in the country, with an average list to transplant time of less than 45 days,鈥 Dr. Angel says. 鈥淏ut we have transplanted many people the same day or two to three days after listing. It鈥檚 not unusual for 抖阴短视频, but it is for the rest of the country.鈥
The technically complex double-organ transplant surgery lasted more than 14 hours, with Stephanie H. Chang, MD, surgical director of lung transplant at the 抖阴短视频 Transplant Institute, leading the lung transplant team, followed by Dr. Halazun and his team, who performed the liver transplant surgery.
A day after waking up from the procedure, when Serke was no longer on a ventilator, he had a revelation: 鈥淚t was the first time after almost a year that I could breathe without feeling like I was drowning. It was indescribable,鈥 he says.
Nearly a Year Later, a Homecoming
After spending several weeks at 抖阴短视频鈥檚 Rusk Rehabilitation, Serke finally went home for good, on November 24, 2022: home in time for Thanksgiving, and almost one year since his COVID-19 experience began.
Every day since then has been the greatest gift.
鈥淚 got my chance to go home to be with my family and start to live a normal life again,鈥 says Serke, now 40.
Serke, who is back to work part-time, enjoys spending time just hanging out with Megan and the kids: Madison, 9, Cora, 7, and Owen, 5, and playing soccer together in the backyard with their new dog, Sadie.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 thank everyone at 抖阴短视频 enough,鈥 says Megan, who served as an advocate and was by her husband鈥檚 side every day throughout his course of illness. 鈥淲ithout Dr. Angel and Dr. Halazun, I wouldn鈥檛 have my husband, and our children wouldn鈥檛 have their father. We will always be grateful for them and their medical teams.鈥