CITY TRIBUNE
Matriarch of Scotty’s Diner donates kidney to her son!
From this week’s Galway City Tribune – A well-known family in the Galway restaurant trade have swapped chef whites for hospital gowns after the matriarch donated a kidney to her son.
Jenny and Andrew Ishmael, synonymous with Scotty’s Diner in Cúirt na Coiribe on the Headford Road in Terryland, are recovering in Beaumont Hospital after the marathon live donor operation.
It took place last Monday and staff are so impressed by the quick recovery of mother and son that they could be discharged as early as this weekend.
“It went really well. I’m still a bit sore. We’re still on the mend. It’s working perfectly,” says Andrew from the isolation ward of the hospital’s Kidney Centre. “My creatine was over 1,000 when I came in and it’s already around 260.
“I felt weak after the surgery, but I could feel that bit of life in me again straight away. It’s amazing how quick it works. Mom wasn’t too great after the surgery – it was her first ever. She was quite sore, a bit iffy, but she’s good now.
“We have rooms back-to-back. We’ve been going for walks, going for breakfast together. It’s nice to spend that time together.”
Andrew – or Drew as he’s known to family and friends – was diagnosed with kidney disease when he was just 16.
Berger’s Disease occurs when an antibody called immunoglobulin builds up in the kidneys and results in inflammation, which over time, can hamper the kidneys’ ability to filter waste from the blood.
He managed the condition well for over a decade without too much impact on his life.
The son of classically trained chefs who studied together at Johnson and Wales College in Rhode Island, he grew up working in his parents’ American-style diner, trading since 1991.
This is a shortened preview version of this story. To read the rest of the article, see the February 3 edition of the Galway City Tribune. You can buy a digital edition HERE.