A WREXHAM man has shared his story of having been stuck on the heart transplant waiting list for nearly four years.

With over 300 people across the UK, including 11 in Wales, waiting for a heart transplant this Valentine’s Day, NHS Blood and Transplant is calling on families to have a heart-to-heart about organ donation.

While heart transplants have continued across the UK throughout the pandemic, the waiting list has risen 85% in the last decade - from 169 patients in March 2012 to 313 in March 2021.

Ryan Gabb, 30, from Wrexham, has been waiting on the heart transplant list since May 2018.

Ryan’s life was turned upside down in September 2017 when he suddenly became very unwell.

He said: “I had been feeling unwell for a few weeks, just general tiredness and flu type symptoms that I couldn’t shake off. It was gradually getting worse and I was starting to become breathless too. Knowing something wasn’t right, I borrowed a friend’s Fitbit to check my heart rate and it was over 100, I knew I needed to get checked out, so I left work early and went to the doctors.

“The GP sent me straight to the local hospital where I was told I had Dilated Cardiomyopathy and I would likely need a heart transplant. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing and was in complete shock, I knew I hadn’t been well but was not expecting anything so serious.”

Ryan was monitored before, five days later, he was airlifted in a helicopter to Manchester after going into cardiogenic shock. He was added to the urgent heart waiting list but then had an LVAD – emergency heart pump fitted – before being relisted for transplant again in May 2018.

Ryan explains: “I am doing pretty well at the moment with the LVAD but waiting for a transplant can be hard, there is a constant need to have my phone with me and I need a regular electricity supply so my LVAD batteries can be charged. The worry of power cuts is always in the back of my mind. I have been told I could have a long wait for a heart which is hard to hear in your mid-twenties. I had to finish my job as it was quite physical.

“I hope the year ahead can bring some normality and I also hope more people will discuss organ donation with their families and register their decision. You never know when or who might need that help. I used to be a regular blood donor and I also joined the NHS Organ Donor Register when I was 18. I thought both were important, but I never expected that my life would change so much.”

Even though the law around organ donation has now moved to an opt out system across Wales, England and Scotland, many people are still not aware that families will still always be involved before organ donation goes ahead.

While families are more likely, and find it easier, to support donation when they know it is what their loved one wanted, only 43% of the UK population have registered their decision on the NHS Organ Donor Register and just 38% say that they have shared their organ donation decision with their family.

Anthony Clarkson, Director of Organ and Tissue Donation and Transplantation at NHS Blood and Transplant, says: “We encourage everyone in Wales to have that heart-to-heart now. Talk to your family and tell them your organ donation decision, leave them certain of it. And make sure you know what they would want too, so you can support their decision. This Valentine’s Day have a heart-to-heart and share your organ donation decision to help save more lives.”

For more information, or to register your organ donation decision, please visit: www.organdonation.nhs.uk or call 0300 123 23 23.