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Setback for bone marrow transplant brother Luke Hartley

7:30pm Tuesday 15th April 2008

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THE youngest of four Hampshire brothers to undergo a lifesaving bone marrow transplant has suffered a setback in his recovery.

Eight-year-old Luke Hartley, pictured above, has spent the past two weeks back in hospital battling a virus.

Luke underwent a second bone marrow transplant, after the first attempt failed, before Christmas. He then spent Christmas and New Year in London's Great Ormond Street Hospital.

He has been back home in Romsey with his parents David and Allison and three brothers since mid-January, but was admitted to Southampton General Hospital two weeks ago with rotavirus.

Luke is once again in an isolation room, as he was at Great Ormond Street, because his immune system is still weak following the transplant.

Rotavirus causes vomiting, diarrhoea and a temperature.

Virus

Dad David said: "Luke caught the virus from his two brothers who, ironically, we think picked it up at the same hospital as Daniel was in for two nights before Easter with an eye infection. At the moment there is no clear end to the virus.

"He has been his usual brave self through all this and a model patient, but he's spent too long in a small isolation room."

All four Hartley brothers were diagnosed with X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome in November 2003 and their parents were told that, without bone marrow transplants, they were unlikely to live into their teens.

Joshua, 16, Nathan, 14, and 12-year-old Daniel have all had successful bone marrow transplants.

Luke's second transplant has been successful and he will return to school when his immune system is back to full strength.


Your Say YourThis is Hampshire

Sceptic, Waterside says...
8:43pm Tue 15 Apr 08

What a brave family!Family and friends must be so proud of those kids, they've all lived a life already!
It also reinforces the fact that most of us have got nothing really to moan about at all...but we all carry on whingeing and whineing about nothing of any real consequence. Pathetic creatures really aren't we?

Amy, Waterside says...
12:42am Wed 16 Apr 08

A very brave family. Everyone in the area is keeping our fingers crossed that Luke will get better soon and him and his brothers can live a long and happy life without any more comlications.

Ricky, Conroe, Texas says...
1:21am Wed 16 Apr 08

I came across this story by accident. It so happens that I am the father of a bone marrow (cord blood) transplant survivor (now 12). I can only say this family lives in our Texas hearts. I hope Luke can go home soon and be with his siblings and that he can live a happy, healthy and LONG life. Every day we see miracles. This family has seen three.

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