Some people thank their lucky stars when fortune smiles on them but Pittsburgh Penguins fan Kelly Sowatsky knows exactly who was behind her life-saving kidney transplant, after her plea for help was answered by a fellow supporter.
School teacher Sowatsky, 31, was in desperate need of the transplant after her kidney function dropped to just 7 percent after suffering an infection that turned into septicemia.
After being placed on a transplant waiting list of potentially five years, she turned to fellow Penguins fans to help.
Sowatsky drew up a sign to display at games, describing her ordeal and search for a donor.
“Calling All Hockey Fans! I Need A Kidney! Kidney! Kidney! Gratefully Yours, Kelly,” the sign read.
After an unsuccessful first attempt at a road game in New Jersey, Sowatsky’s plea was picked up by the Penguins’ social media team, who tweeted out the image back in April.
The tactic worked and the tweet gained widespread attention – including from fellow Penguins fan Jeff Lynd in Delaware.
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The 35-year-old volunteered his services – and his organ – and turned out to be a match.
The transplant operation took place earlier in November at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and it is now reported that both patients are fine, with Sowatsky’s kidney function returning to 99 percent.
"There's no words to really express the gratitude and the way I feel about what (Lynd) did for me because he literally saved my life," Sowatsky said, according to the Penguins website.
"And the doctors, too. If you trickle it down, the Pittsburgh Penguins are the reason my life is being saved, too. If it weren't for (Penguins director of new media Andi Perelman) and for me loving the Penguins..."
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Lynd was modest in accepting the praise, saying Penguins legend and current owner Mario Lemieux should in fact be the one to thank, having “saved” their pair’s beloved team from bankruptcy.
"She always cries and thanks me and I always tell her to thank Mario (Lemieux). If Mario didn't save the team then none of us would be here," Lynd said.
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“It's something you see out of a movie,” he added. “It's just incredible because of the way everything had to transpire and every specific event that had to work in order to be where we are.”
“She's going to be OK. I'm going to be OK, and we're both going to go back to our normal lives. A year from now it'll be like this never happened.”