
10-year-old heart transplant patient saves lives of two toddlers
It started with the gift of a single heart — and ended with three lives transformed.
Last July, doctors at New York-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital performed an extremely rare series of surgeries that changed the lives of three children forever.
A heart from a deceased donor was transplanted into 10-year-old Hend Almesafri, who paid it forward by then providing her pulmonary valve to John Catoliato, 2, and her aortic valve to Teddy Carter, 3.
9 Doctors at New York-Presbyterian performed an extremely rare surgery on Hend Almesafri, 10, John Catoliato, 2, and Teddy Carter, 3 — changing their lives forever.
NewYork-Presbyterian
Now thriving, all three kids reunited at the hospital last February, where Hend surprised her 'heart brothers' with gifts and a moment their families will never forget.
'You see these kids interacting and you know people are good,' John's mother, Joanne Dowling, told the Post.
'We can never come up with a gift for her — what could you buy someone who gave your child the gift of life?'
John's scary heart condition
Joanne was only 24 weeks pregnant when she found out her unborn child had truncus arteriosus, a condition in which instead of having two exits from the heart — one going to the body and one going to the lungs — he only had one and a hole in his heart.
She and her husband, Thomas Catoliato, were immediately referred to New York-Presbyterian.
'This is our first child together, and it just took a drastic turn — I felt like everything was obliterated from that point forward,' Joanne said.
9 Thomas Catoliato, Joanne Dowling and John Catoliato at the reunion last February.
NewYork-Presbyterian
'I don't even know how to describe it, other than your pregnancy is no longer your pregnancy. You're just scared from that point forward, but the team made it so it was very seamless.'
She never considered terminating.
'I loved [John] from the minute I found out I was pregnant with him,' she said. 'I knew that the doctors at New York-Presbyterian could fix him. If anyone could fix him, it would be them.'
He had open heart surgery when he was only 5 days old and, while it went well, it was difficult to accept that he would need to continue having surgeries his entire life because the artificial valve just wouldn't grow.
9 John was only a few days old when he went through open heart surgery.
NewYork-Presbyterian
So when they found out about the possibility of a heart transplant, they were hopeful.
'It's almost like there's a light at the end of the tunnel for him,' Joanne said. 'It's a comfort to us to know that John may never need an open heart surgery — we may never have to hand our child to a surgeon again.'
In July, she was grabbing a cup of coffee in the afternoon when she got the call — they had a match. Ten-year-old Hend would be getting her own brand-new heart, but was donating the perfectly usable pulmonary valve from her old one.
Things moved quickly after that. Thomas raced home from a trip to the beach and was on the phone with Dr. Gladstone discussing the procedure that evening.
9 'It's a comfort to us to know that John may never need an open heart surgery — we may never have to hand our child to a surgeon again,' Joanne said.
NewYork-Presbyterian
It was a degree of professionalism, kindness, consistency and communication that had kept their spirits up since they first found out about John's condition.
'They were like, 'This is what we do for a living, right?' This is what we go to work every day to do. So they kind of held us up. They pumped wind back into our sails. And they kept that level of connection,' he said.
At 5 a.m. the following morning, they came to the hospital feeling scared and confused, but they knew that they — and John — were in good hands.
9 'We call them heart brothers,' Joanne said. 'John has one side and Teddy has the other.'
New York Presbyterian
'It was so sunny that day, and John was in his pajamas, and I just looked at him and thought 'Buddy, you don't even know.' He had no clue,' she recalled, tearfully. 'And [the hospital staff] was just so kind.'
Even though John was only 18 months old at the time, Joanne said the doctors 'didn't make it traumatizing at all to take him' away, because they 'made it fun for' John, as though he was just about to go on a little ride.
'New York-Presbyterian was so prepared on every level, from the general intake to the ER all the way up to getting him into the OR,' Thomas said. 'It was almost as if everybody had a team meeting of 50 people for five hours, to which every step, every door that opened, every transition was seamless.'
9 The Catoliato and Carter families at the reunion.
NewYork-Presbyterian
Following the transplant, they stayed in touch with John and Katie Carter — the parents of the other recipient, Teddy.
'We call them heart brothers,' Joanne said. 'John has one side and Teddy has the other.'
Teddy's surgery-saving transplant
Teddy was two months old when he was diagnosed with a heart defect called aortic stenosis, which can block or restrict blood flow to the heart.
'We were totally surprised,' Katie told The Post.
9 Teddy was two months old when he was diagnosed with a heart defect called aortic stenosis.
New York Presbyterian
'It was really scary to have a child who needs pretty immediate open heart surgery — that is certainly something no parent wants to go through, but we just had faith that we had amazing doctors at New York-Presbyterian and we were lucky to live in New York and have access to such incredible care.'
Despite multiple procedures, he would have needed several more open-heart surgeries before he reached adulthood — were it not for this heart transplant.
9 'It was really scary to have a child who needs pretty immediate open heart surgery,' Katie told The Post.
NewYork-Presbyterian
Two toddlers, one heart donation
This type of surgery — in which one donor's heart is used to benefit multiple recipients — is called a split-root domino heart transplant and it's pretty uncommon.
'A split-root domino partial heart transplant is extremely rare and has been performed only a handful of times — and, up until this operation, never in the northeast,' Dr. Andrew Goldstone, surgical director of pediatric heart transplantation at New York-Presbyterian, told the Post.
'We're uniquely positioned to perform domino transplants and split-root dominos because of the surgical and team expertise in all aspects of cardiovascular disease and transplantation, and the resources necessary to make this all a reality.'
9 All of children, including Teddy, are doing well now.
NewYork-Presbyterian
All three of the recipients are doing well, and they reunited at the hospital in February — an experience Joanne described as both 'surreal' and 'humbling.'
'You see this little girl and she's got gift bags — she bought them presents,' Joanne said. 'I thought, 'Oh my God, we didn't get her anything.' But what can you give somebody that gave your child an option to live?'
'It was just really special to be able to spend some time together,' Katie said.
And if you think the kids are too young to really understand what was happening, according to Teddy's father, they seem to comprehend more than you'd expect.
'We were in the car driving to [Teddy's] appointment the other day, and he said 'My heart was broken and now it's fixed,'' he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Omada Health IPO signals healthier market, avoids 'down-round' trend
The IPO market is starting to feel healthier. Omada Health, a 14-year-old company providing virtual care for chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension between office visits, closed its first trading day on Friday at $23 a share, a 21% jump from the IPO price of $19. The IPO valued the company just above $1 billion (excluding employee options), a figure that's nearly identical to Omada's last private valuation of $1 billion set in its previous VC round. The debut is one of the first among recent IPOs that was not a so-called down-round. Many of the latest public listings, including Hinge, ServiceTitan, and Reddit, priced below their private market highs, though have faired well as public companies. For founder and CEO Sean Duffy, the successful public offering validates his decision to start a company that he believed the market desperately needed. In 2011, he dropped out of Harvard Medical School after realizing that chronic illness patients required more continuous support than the existing healthcare system delivered. Before the offering, he owned 4.1% of the company, according to Omada's offering document. Other significant shareholders included Revelation Partners (10.9%), US Venture Partners (9.9%), Andreessen Horowitz (9.6%), and FMR (9.3%). Duffy told TechCrunch that over his 14-year journey as a founder, he had many harrowing moments. "I didn't think our series A was going to come together because we were working on this commercial deal that didn't materialize, and that spooked one investor," he said. "As a young business, something tries to kill you every month," he continued. "And then as the business grows, it turns into like every quarter or six months, year, two years." One of the recent challenges for many digital health businesses is navigating the "collapse" of the market post-COVID boom. Omada steered through the turbulent times by seeking new, rising markets. It recently expanded its offerings to include diet management support for GLP-1 patients.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tampa Police get 300 new lifesaving choking devices from New York-based company
The Brief A company based in New York donated choking rescue devices to the Tampa Police Department. The devices, which are called LifeVac, create a one-way suction to remove lodged food or objects from a choking victim. These devices will be distributed to officers soon. TAMPA, Fla. - A New York-based company donated 300 choking rescue devices to the Tampa Police Department. These devices, called LifeVac, create a one-way suction to remove lodged food or objects from a choking victim. "This is just another tool for us, especially for our youth, to be out there and provide another opportunity to save a life," Tampa Police Chief Lee Bercaw said of the donation. The backstory Last month,a Tampa police officer used back blows to help save a toddler who was choking on a tomato. "That's the reason that we're getting this donation," Bercaw said Friday of the bodycam video. "[LifeVac inventor] Mr. Lih saw that video and said, 'I've got to get that product down here in a generous donation.'" "I knew as a parent, I'd be freaking out. I would be very distressed. So I tried to come up with something really simple. You push it, pull it, and that suction pulls it out," LifeVac President and Creator Arthur Lih said. These devices will be distributed to officers soon. Bercaw told FOX 13 the devices will be placed in patrol cars and will be used in schools and at Police Athletic League youth activities. Dig deeper As shown in LifeVac's online instructional video, the New York-based company said people should first follow choking protocols established by the American Red Cross. That means doing back blows and abdominal thrusts first. And if those actions don't work – or if those actions cannot be completed for whatever reason – then a LifeVac device can come into play. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) encourages people to follow established choking rescue protocols by the American Red Cross and the American Heart Association. In an April 2024 update, the FDA said these protocols do not include anti-choking devices: "The safety and effectiveness of anti-choking devices that are being sold over-the-counter have not been established; they are not FDA approved or cleared." Success Stories Just this week, a Georgia police officer used a LifeVac device to save a driver choking on a water bottle cap. Years ago, LifeVac devices were placed in every school in Sarasota County. The Source The information in this story was gathered by FOX 13's Ariel Plasencia.


New York Times
8 hours ago
- New York Times
Jillian Sackler, Philanthropist Who Defended Husband's Legacy, Dies at 84
Jillian Sackler, an arts philanthropist who struggled to preserve the reputation of her husband, Arthur, by distinguishing him from his two younger Sackler brothers and their descendants, whose aggressive marketing and false advertising on behalf of their pharmaceutical company, Purdue Pharma, triggered the opioid epidemic, died on May 20 in Manhattan. She was 84. Her death, in a hospital, was from esophageal cancer, said Miguel Benavides, her health proxy. Dr. Arthur Sackler, a psychiatrist and researcher who became a pioneer in medical marketing, bought Purdue Frederick, originally based in New York City, in the 1950s and gave each of his brothers a one-third share. They incorporated the company as Purdue Pharma in 1991. (Its headquarters are now in Stamford, Conn.) Dr. Sackler died in 1987 — nine years before the opioid OxyContin was marketed by the company as a powerful painkiller. Shortly after his death, his estate sold his share of the company to his billionaire brothers, Raymond and Mortimer, for $22.4 million. The company's misleading advertising claim that OxyContin was nonaddictive prompted doctors to overprescribe it beginning in the 1990s. The proliferation of the medication ruined countless lives of people who became dependent on it. In 2021, the company proposed a bankruptcy settlement in which members of the Sackler family agreed to pay $4.2 billion over nine years to resolve civil claims related to the opioid crisis. In return, they sought immunity from future lawsuits. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.