
Photo Live On Nebraska.
If your liver is healthy, it is suited for organ donation no matter how old. Dale Steele’s was donated when he died at 100.
Are you signed up for organ donation on your driver’s license? Although I’ve been registered practically since I learned to drive, I was surprised to learn that my liver could be used even now that I’m pretty old. Apparently that has to do with the way a normal healthy liver keeps renewing itself.
Ramon Antonio Vargas wrote recently at the Guardian about a man who, after a life of service to the country, was considered a suitable donor even when he died at age 100.
“After spending some of his prime years aiding German concentration camp survivors and guarding Nazi leaders tried for crimes against humanity at Nuremberg, a US second world war veteran is now believed to have become his country’s oldest known organ donor.
“The story of 100-year-old Dale Steele, who died in February after a head injury led to his being placed on life support, demonstrates how donors’ health is a more important consideration than how old they are, according to Live On Nebraska, an organ-procurement organization in his home state.
“ ‘Mr Steele … is a powerful reminder that generosity has no age limit,’ Live On Nebraska’s president and CEO, Kyle Herber, said in a statement.
“As Herber’s organization put it, after graduating high school and being selected in the military draft, Steele served in France, Germany, Belgium and Czechoslovakia toward the conclusion of the second world war. His duties involved seeking out remnants of the Nazi army and helping survivors of German concentration camps return home.
“Live On Nebraska detailed how Steele subsequently earned a promotion to staff sergeant and was assigned to guard imprisoned defendants at the Nuremberg trials. …
“He eventually went home to Bassett, Nebraska. … Steele supported his family raising cattle at their ranch, managing a farming cooperative and then selling equipment for irrigation and handling grain.
‘Your liver is about three years old; my liver is about three years old.’
“Steele sustained a head injury in February and ended up on life support, his son, Roger, told the Nebraska broadcast news outlet KMTV. Roger Steele described how Live On Nebraska at that point called him and said: ‘We’d like your dad to donate his liver.’
“Roger Steele said he was shocked at the request and replied: ‘He’s over 100 years old.’ But Dr Lee Morrow, Live On Nebraska’s chief medical officer, explained to KMTV that donors’ livers – no matter their age – are in essence only a few years old if healthy because that particular organ has the unique ability to renew its cells throughout a lifetime. …
“Roger Steele credited his father’s longevity and health to the physical labor he performed throughout his life, KMTV noted. He added that a staple of Dale Steele’s diet was vegetables from his own garden. …
“The Nebraska Medicine – Nebraska Medical Center recovered Dale Steele’s liver. It was successfully transplanted a day later, with Live On Nebraska saying that procedure had provided ‘new life to a grateful recipient.’ …
” ‘Dale was always very helpful and considerate of everyone around him – friends and strangers alike,’ Scott Steele’s statement said. ‘We believe he would do just about anything he could for someone in need.’ ”
More at the Guardian, here.














