Treatment for Heart Transplant Rejection
You may need to take more anti-rejection medicine or take it more often.
Rejection can happen after a heart transplant. It is a normal reaction that can happen days, weeks, or even years after surgery. The immune system attacks the new heart because it recognizes that it is from a different person. Medicine can help prevent this, but rejection can still happen.
Types of treatment
Treatment depends on:
How bad the rejection is
Your symptoms
The medicines you take now
The type of rejection
Some treatment choices include:
Taking more of your anti-rejection medicine
Taking anti-rejection medicine more often
Changing to a different medicine
Taking other medicines that weaken your immune system, like prednisone
In severe cases, medicine may be given through an IV.
Other treatments may include:
Plasmapheresis. This removes harmful antibodies from your blood that may cause rejection.
Photophoresis. This uses UV light to weaken cells that attack your new heart.
Lymphoid irradiation. This uses radiation to damage the lymph nodes that make an immune response.
Heart failure medicines. If your new heart is not working well, you may need medicines like beta-blockers.
After treatment, your care team will watch you closely. You may need tests to see if the treatment is working.
While taking anti-rejection medicine
Anti-rejection medicines can suppress your immune system. This makes it easier to get sick. You may need to take antibiotic and antiviral medicines. These help protect you from infections. They do not treat rejection.
Possible complications of rejection
In rare cases, heart transplant rejection can cause problems such as:
Heart failure
Irregular heartbeat, which can cause sudden death
Heart attack
Preventing problems
Here are ways you can help reduce your risk of rejection and problems related to it:
Take all your medicines as advised by your doctor.
Don't run out of medicine.
Check your weight, blood pressure, and temperature as advised by your doctor.
Make sure to go to all your doctor's appointments.
Get your blood tests and other tests done on time.
Talk with your transplant team about your test results.
Eat heart-healthy foods and stay active.
Don’t use tobacco products.
Don’t drink too much alcohol.
Call your transplant team right away if you have signs of rejection.
Living with a heart transplant
Your doctor will tell you how to care for your transplant. This includes:
Eating heart-healthy foods and staying active.
Staying away from tobacco products, drugs, and too much alcohol.
Staying at a healthy weight.
Taking other medicines for your heart. For example, medicines to reduce cholesterol or lower blood pressure.
When to call your doctor
Call your doctor right away if:
You are feeling tired or weak
You have fever or chills
You have trouble breathing
Your heartbeat is fast or irregular
Your blood pressure drops
You have swelling in your feet, hands, or ankles
You gain weight suddenly
You feel body aches, like the flu
You pee less than usual
You feel dizzy or faint
You feel sick to your stomach or don’t want to eat