Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Girl thriving at home after liver surgery

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2015 06:27 AM

    A three-year-old girl from Kingston, Ont., is back home after spending a month in hospital following a liver transplant surgery, but her ailing twin sister is still waiting for a liver donor, the girls' father said Monday.

    Michael Wagner said Phuoc left Toronto's SickKids hospital on Friday — a month after receiving a part of her father's liver — and is now spending time with her family, playing like a healthy little girl.

    Phuoc and her twin sister Binh suffer from Alagille syndrome, a genetic disorder that affects vital organs and can be fatal.

    Wagner said Phuoc was so excited to go back home that by the time he pulled up in the driveway, she yelled "Mama!" repeatedly and tore out her car seat.

    Now the family is back into their routine, he said, and the twins are back to having baths together.

    "It's like it never happened," Wagner said of his daughter's surgery.

    As great as the reunion was, it has also been bittersweet, Wagner said.

    "It's a little sad to see the two of them next to each other and one suffering the symptoms of Alagille and liver disease, and the other not," he said.

    "But you know what? Her turn will come."

    It took Wagner about 10 days to recover in the Toronto General Hospital after surgeons removed about 15 per cent of his liver.

    Phuoc struggled after surgery when she contracted the stomach flu, her father said. She threw up repeatedly and had a serious bout of diarrhea, which threw off her medications and slowed her recovery.

    The most difficult part, Wagner said, was the isolation designed to prevent the spread of infection.

    The changes in his daughter are startling, Wagner said. Her complexion is no longer a yellow hue.

    "You can see the white of her eyes — we've never seen them," Wagner said. The constant scratching has stopped.

    "Even her teeth are starting to go white. It was almost instantaneous, like someone flipped a switch."

    Phuoc sleeps soundly, Wagner said.

    "I've never seen her sleep relaxed, always a little bit tense," he said. "Now she is just at peace."

    Meanwhile, her twin sister, Binh, waits for a donor. She still scratches and sleeps fitfully.

    After Phuoc's surgery last month, Dr. Gary Levy, who runs the liver donor program at Toronto General Hospital, said they had identified a handful of candidates for Binh. But little information has been shared with the family since that time.

    "I'm sure they have someone, but they don't tell us anything and I tell you, I've asked them all. And they're just not going to tell me until it's 100 per cent a go," Wagner said.

    A spokeswoman for Toronto General Hospital said last week that about 500 potential liver donors have come forward offering to help Binh.

    Wagner said that with both him and Phuoc recovering, the family will be in a much better position to care for Binh when her surgery comes.

    In the meantime, life for the Wagners, who have nine children, goes on.

    On Monday they revelled in the doldrums of paperwork — they filled out school applications for the twins who are set to start kindergarten in the fall.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Overturns Jail Sentence For Banned B.C. Driver Who Killed Woman

    Judge Overturns Jail Sentence For Banned B.C. Driver Who Killed Woman
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia judge has overturned a six-month jail term handed to a chronic prohibited driver who struck and killed a pedestrian at a crosswalk in the province's Interior. 

    Judge Overturns Jail Sentence For Banned B.C. Driver Who Killed Woman

    B.C., Federal Governments Launch Initiative To Lure Asian Companies To Vancouver

    B.C., Federal Governments Launch Initiative To Lure Asian Companies To Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia is partnering with the federal government and the Business Council of B.C. on a project to lure Asian companies to Vancouver.

    B.C., Federal Governments Launch Initiative To Lure Asian Companies To Vancouver

    Police Seek Graffiti Tagger After More Than 100 Incidents At Sun Peaks Ski Resort

    Police Seek Graffiti Tagger After More Than 100 Incidents At Sun Peaks Ski Resort
    Kamloops Rural RCMP Staff Sgt. Doug Aird says the suspect has been spray painting signs, posts and electrical boxes throughout the area.

    Police Seek Graffiti Tagger After More Than 100 Incidents At Sun Peaks Ski Resort

    B.C. Theatre Owners Tie Up Fifty Shades Showing Because Of 18A Rating

    B.C. Theatre Owners Tie Up Fifty Shades Showing Because Of 18A Rating
    SECHELT, B.C. — Owners of a small-town theatre on British Columbia's Sunshine Coast have thrown a kink into the plans of movie goers bent on seeing Fifty Shades of Grey. 

    B.C. Theatre Owners Tie Up Fifty Shades Showing Because Of 18A Rating

    Medical Professionals Try To Answer Burning Questions On Doctor-assisted Death

    Medical Professionals Try To Answer Burning Questions On Doctor-assisted Death
    TORONTO — In the wake of the Supreme Court of Canada's historic ruling that struck down the ban on physician-assisted death, health professionals are grappling with a host of thorny ethical and practical issues raised by the decision.

    Medical Professionals Try To Answer Burning Questions On Doctor-assisted Death

    Scientists Say Second Orca Calf Born To Endangered J Pod In Less Than Two Months

    Scientists Say Second Orca Calf Born To Endangered J Pod In Less Than Two Months
    VANCOUVER — Scientists say another baby has been born to an endangered pod of killer whales off British Columbia's coast — the second new addition in less than two months.

    Scientists Say Second Orca Calf Born To Endangered J Pod In Less Than Two Months