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    New York Air National Guardsman donates kidney to fellow 105th Airlift Wing member

    New York Air National Guardsman donates kidney to fellow 105th Airlift Wing member

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Julio Olivencia Jr | New York Air National Guard Staff Sgt. Daniel Cola ( left) and Master Sgt. Henry...... read more read more

    NEWBURGH, NY, UNITED STATES

    01.15.2016

    Story by Staff Sgt. Julio Olivencia Jr 

    New York National Guard

    NEWBURGH, N.Y. – A New York Air National guardsman has literally given something of himself to help a suffering fellow unit member.

    Master Sgt. Henry Windels donated one of his kidneys to Staff Sgt. Daniel Cola in October, saving Cola from a difficult, limited life with continual kidney-dialysis treatments.

    Windels has returned to duty at Stewart Air National Guard Base here, Cola is continuing a remarkable recovery, and the two men -- both members of the 105th Airlift Wing and once just acquaintances -- are much closer.

    Moreover, Cola and his wife Aly are eternally grateful to Windels. They’ve gained a new perspective on life from the life-changing experience -- and they’ve changed their lives to help others.

    “My husband was given a second chance at life, we aren’t going to do things the same,” Aly said. “We’re not going to take things for granted, like holidays and lazy Sundays.”

    It had been a tough road for the couple since the onset of Cola’s illness in the fall of 2014.

    Everything was coming together for the flight equipment specialist then: he was 28 years old, in his third year as a City of New York police officer, his 10th year with the New York Air National Guard, and he’d just married Aly, his childhood sweetheart.

    Cola and his new bride traded the gray New York autumn for the blue skies, white sand, and crystal-clear water of the Turks and Caicos Islands in late October.

    The trip had all the usual trappings of a tropical honeymoon -- kayaking, horseback riding, snorkeling and the like.

    But by the fourth day of the week-long trip, Cola began to feel ill.

    “He was really only feeling sick at night. During the day he seemed to be OK,” Aly said.

    Throughout the trip Cola would be feverish and achy at night, but felt better during the day. The couple thought he just had a minor sickness that can be common when traveling abroad, but on the final night his condition became much worse.

    “That’s when it hit me full blown. I was puking, dehydrated and couldn’t keep anything down,” Cola said.

    There was a small hospital on the island, but Cola just wanted to get back home to New York, where he trusted the medical care more.

    Besides, he thought he just had a bug and needed to be hydrated, which happened to him on a previous trip to the Dominican Republic.

    His symptoms continued to get worse, making the trip home a difficult one.

    He began vomiting nearly every 15 minutes and looked like a zombie, Aly said.

    If Cola running back and forth from his seat on the plane to the lavatory wasn’t enough to make some of his fellow passengers uneasy, the fact that this was happening at the height of the Ebola scare in 2014 was.

    “The flight was terrible,” Aly said. “Everybody was staring at us, everybody was scared, everybody thought he had Ebola.”

    Though Aly tried to convince her new husband to go to the hospital during the layover in Miami, he decided to press on to New York.

    Cola said he knew he didn’t have Ebola and he was still convinced he had some minor illness that would be dissipate once he was hydrated.

    “We landed in New York and went straight to the hospital,” Cola said.

    Cola was admitted to a hospital and hooked up to an IV. After a few hours of tests and monitoring, his doctor returned with an entourage of other medical professionals, and they began grilling the couple with questions.

    “A team of like 20 specialists came in and they were like ‘you need to tell us everything about your trip -- where you were, what animals you were around, what you ate, every activity you did,’” Aly said.

    That’s when they were told Cola was in kidney failure.

    He was treated for the mosquito-borne disease dengue fever, also known as breakbone fever.

    The symptoms of the disease are fever, headache, muscle and joint pains. If left untreated it can progress into a life-threatening hemorrhagic fever.

    “It literally feels like your bones are breaking,” Cola said. “They describe it as bone crushing pain.”

    While Cola had an IV to keep him hydrated and medication to manage the pain, it was just a waiting game to let the disease work through his system.

    The hope was once the dengue fever was gone he would regain kidney function.

    “I think that’s where my head was most of the time -- I was just hoping I regained kidney function,” Cola said.

    Between the fever and the pain medication, Cola was in a fog and not fully aware of what was going on.

    Aly, however, was very aware and becoming increasingly worried.

    “I was just in disbelief,” she said. “I just couldn’t believe it was happening. I couldn’t believe how it happened. He only had like one bite on him. I was covered from head to toe in mosquito bites, so you figure if anyone should have gotten sick it should have been me.”

    Doctors told the couple that they didn’t think he would regain kidney function after about a week of monitoring and blood tests four times a day.

    A kidney biopsy returned even more startling news.

    Cola was diagnosed with stage five Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), which meant his kidney function was less than 20 percent and he would eventually need a new kidney or have to go on dialysis for the rest of his life.

    Cola and his wife believe his CKD was caused by dengue fever, which is made worse when a patient has had a different strain of the disease before. Cola believes he got the disease while in the Dominican Republic the year prior.

    “For someone to go from good kidney function to end-stage kidney function at this age is not common,” Cola said.

    Aly got tested right away only to find that she wasn’t a match, but as luck would have it, she was a match for an individual who was part of a
    complex kidney exchange.

    A kidney exchange involves multiple donors and patients. This way Aly could donate a kidney to someone else and Cola could still benefit by receiving a kidney from another donor in the exchange.

    There were eight individuals involved in the exchange, creating a sort of chain of donations.

    “It was crazy, we had what we thought was perfect timing,” Aly said.

    A few days before the surgery, in May of 2015, Cola was informed that there was a chance that his donor had tuberculosis. The exchange was called off after much debate among his doctors.

    His hopes were raised once again when a kidney became available on his birthday in June, but that fell through as well.

    “It was a waiting game,” Aly said. “We couldn’t do anything and the longer it went on the less hope we had.”

    And so they waited.

    Master Sgt. Henry Windels, a loadmaster, heard about Cola’s condition in June.

    The two Airmen attended water survival and parachute training together four years before, but both described their relationship at the
    time as acquaintances.

    “I’d seen him around here, but I didn’t know him,” Windels said.

    Windels heard that Cola was sick, but didn’t know to what extent until another member of the base told him Cola needed a kidney.

    Approximately 12 years earlier, Windels read a story about someone who donated a kidney to a complete stranger.

    “It seemed like a noble thing to do and I was interested, but it never really went anywhere,” Windels said.

    Windels called Cola shortly after he found out about the situation.

    Cola thought Windels was reaching out to show support, but when the two spoke, Windels asked how he could get tested to see if he was a match.

    “I told him to think about it and see how it would affect him at Stewart, but at that point, I knew he had his mind made up,” Cola said. “I got the feeling he already did his soul-searching beforehand.”

    The doctors said that Windels would most likely be a match since he was a universal blood donor, and they began the long testing and preparation process shortly after they spoke.

    Windels was put through numerous tests over the next three months.

    He had dozens of vials of blood drawn, heart and brain scans, stress tests and meetings with a kidney specialist. He even had to meet with a psychiatrist and social worker to make sure he understood what he was doing, and that he was doing it for the right reasons.

    Cola remained patient through the process, because he knew that his hopes could be dashed at any time, as they were before.

    Windels, on the other hand, wanted to get under the knife as soon as possible to help his wingman. There were a number of times that he fought with the hospital to move appointments up, because he didn’t want Cola to have to remain sick for longer than he had to.

    “I was very relaxed compared to Henry,” Cola said. “He wanted it done right away. Throughout the whole process he kept apologizing, saying ‘I’m sorry this is taking so long.’”

    Windels was cleared to donate in late September and the date was set for Oct. 6.

    Cola called his kidney specialist the Saturday before to cancel his scheduled appointment on Oct. 5 and tell her the good news.

    She told him it was just in time, because his kidney function was below 10 percent and she had planned to discuss him going on dialysis.

    Cola said dialysis will prolong a patient’s life, but it makes receiving a kidney later more difficult and there are a number of quality of life issues associated with the treatment.

    “It’s a big strain on the body,” Cola said.

    The surgery took longer than expected, but there were no complications and Cola’s new kidney immediately began to pick up the slack.

    “The day after surgery, I’ve never seen him look so good or feel so good,” Aly said. “He was a different person.”

    Cola is feeling much better since the surgery. He has begun to gain back the 30 pounds he lost and his kidney function is back to normal, but he still has some recovery and monitoring to undergo before he is cleared for work.

    Windels recovered quickly and was back flying aboard a Stewart C-17 cargo plane by mid-November.

    He said he was given no restrictions, but will follow up regularly with a doctor to be sure everything is going as planned.

    “My doctor told me just to live my life. He didn’t say ‘lay off salt,’ or ‘do this that and the other thing,’” Windels said.

    The two Airmen have become much closer since the surgery and hangout on a regular basis.

    They even joke that Cola, a New York Giants fan, is part New York Jets fan now that he has Windels’ kidney. All kidding aside, the couple is showing their gratitude to Windels by dedicating themselves to helping others.

    They’re planning a fundraiser for Donate Life, an organization dedicated to educating people on the benefits of donating and connecting them with different resources, and they have been volunteering through Volunteer New York to, among others, send care packages to troops overseas.

    “I constantly think, ‘what do you say to the person who literally saved your life,’” Cola said.

    “I think we can only thank him and show our thanks by paying it forward,” Aly said.

    For more information on Donate Life visit, donatelife.net and for more information on Volunteer New York visit, volunteernewyork.org

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 01.15.2016
    Date Posted: 01.19.2016 16:34
    Story ID: 186555
    Location: NEWBURGH, NY, US

    Web Views: 792
    Downloads: 1

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