The One-In-Six-Billion Girl
Australian Teen's Transplant Transforms Her Immune System In Never-Seen-Before Way
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Play CBS Video Video Transplant Patient Defies Odds Most transplant patients have to take strong medications to prevent their bodies from rejecting donated tissue. But that's not the case for a medical marvel down under. Richard Schlesinger reports.
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Meet Demi Brennan, the one-in-six-billion girl. (CBS)
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Interactive HealthWatch Explore health issues including AIDS, cancer and antibiotics.
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Video Archive Eye On Health CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook examines various health issues and treatments.
"I feel like a normal person," she said.
She's 15 now, but six years ago she had a liver transplant - major surgery but pretty routine. What happened next, some people are calling a miracle.
"We didn't believe her," said Dr. Stephen Alexander. "We thought that this was just too strange an occurrence to occur."
Most patients have to take strong medications to prevent their bodies from rejecting donated tissue. But Demi's body not only accepted the donated liver, it actually adopted the immune system - even the blood type of the donor.
"When it was first brought by the lab staff to my colleague and said 'this girl's blood group's gone from 0-negative to 0-positive,' first of all, we thought we must have made a mistake," said Hematologist Dr. Julie Curtin.
It's never happened before.
"We think she's a one-in-six-billion kind of a girl," Alexander said.
Somehow she did what doctors have been trying to do ever since they started performing transplants, get the body to stop trying to reject donated organs.
"The holy grail of transplant was achieved and that's what we were trying to achieve for everybody, but Demi's body had done that herself," Curtin said.
So now doctors will be studying her case to see if they can unlock the secrets of Demi's astonishing achievement.
"It's my second chance at life," Demi said.
She looks and says she feels just like any other healthy 15-year-old girl - purple hair, green nails ... and feeling in the pink.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





-Pretty sure she is another variation of the Mammal Human Sapiens specie. All gives hope for humanity regarding survival, in case of major decimation. It''s called survival mechanism and evolution.