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Retired Fire Captain Celebrates Eight-Year Anniversary of Double Lung Transplant

Shawn M. Graves has been fighting fires for nearly 50 years. 

Graves kicked off his firefighting career in May 1975, working in Salt Lake City, Utah. After 30 years of service, Graves was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), brought on by decades of firefighting and smoking cigarettes. 

Graves鈥 COPD quickly worsened, leading him to retire in 2010鈥攋ust three years after his diagnosis. 

鈥淚 retired because I was starting to notice I couldn鈥檛 breathe anymore,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was afraid I was going to hurt someone, so I knew it was time.鈥
Shawn Graves, patient patient

However, Graves鈥 firefighting career continues. A year before retiring, Graves joined NASCAR as a member of the pit firefighting crew. Twice a year, Graves travels to Las Vegas to work at a weekend race series. Since joining NASCAR in 2009, Graves has only missed three out of 30 races. Two of those three times were due to breathing issues related to his COPD. 

Graves鈥 quality of life continued to decline, and he was on oxygen 24 hours a day. In late 2015, Graves started the process to assess his eligibility for a double lung transplant. At one point along the way, Graves thought he had lost his chance to qualify for the transplant list. 

鈥淚 had trouble getting on the list because I failed one of the nicotine tests,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 going to give me a transplant because of that, but then I worked so hard and was clean for so long that they put me on the list.鈥 

After more than six months of testing and assessments, Graves got the good news: he was on the transplant list. The approval didn鈥檛 come a moment too soon. His health was declining, and he was on 25 liters of oxygen. 

鈥淚t was horrible,鈥 he said. Three months later, Graves got the phone call.

鈥淭hey called me and said, 鈥業t鈥檚 a wonderful day for a transplant'...I jumped in my Corvette and went Mach 1 all the way from Herriman. I was lucky I didn鈥檛 get a ticket.鈥
Shawn Graves standing next to Dr. Craig Selzman
Double lung transplant recipient Shawn Graves and Dr. Craig Selzman

On June 29, 2016, Graves received a double lung transplant at University of Utah Hospital. 
鈥淚 had the greatest surgeon ever鈥擟raig Selzman,鈥 he said. 鈥淎ll of the transplant doctors and nurses have been wonderful to me. The team is just amazing.鈥 

麻豆学生精品版 is the only resource for lung transplants in the Mountain West. Across the United States, over 4,500 patients are on the waitlist for new lungs. The transplant team at U of U Health performs roughly 40 lung transplants each year for patients in Utah and beyond. 

鈥淥ur lung transplant program is a true distinguishing feature of U of U Health,鈥 said Craig Selzman, MD, chief of the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery at 麻豆学生精品版. 鈥淲e have a very deep team of people that deal with patients who have very advanced lung disease, and it鈥檚 a point of pride that we can offer this service鈥攏ot only in the state of Utah but across the Mountain West.鈥 

Selzman is the Dr. Russell M. Nelson and Dantzel W. Nelson Presidential Endowed Chair and a member of the lung transplant team. This multidisciplinary group includes pulmonary medicine doctors, transplant surgeons, transplant coordinators, pharmacists, social workers, registered dietitians, financial specialists, and pulmonary rehabilitation therapists. 

It was this strong care team that helped Graves before, during, and after his surgery. But for Graves, the most important member of his care team is his wife, Linda.

鈥淭o get a transplant, you have to have someone who can be with you 24/7 for the first six or seven months after the surgery,鈥 Graves said. 鈥淢y wife did it for me, and I tell you what, it鈥檚 a big job.鈥

Two days after Graves鈥 transplant, he was still on one liter of oxygen. 

鈥淒r. Selzman came to visit, and he took me off oxygen completely,鈥 Graves said. 鈥淚t kind of freaked me out at first, because I didn鈥檛 think I was going to be all right.鈥  He hasn鈥檛 been on oxygen since. 

Graves-Shawn-photo

鈥淭here鈥檚 a light at the end of the tunnel,鈥 he said. 鈥淵our health may be bad, but they can help you. Not everyone does well, and there鈥檚 no guarantee. But if you are willing to put in the work, the outcome can be very good.鈥
As for his care team, Graves can鈥檛 say enough good things. 

鈥淭hose people are the reason I鈥檓 alive鈥擨 know that,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he lung transplant program is amazing, and all I can say is if they ever need anything from me, I鈥檓 there.鈥

 

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