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She was waiting for a kidney transplant for 5 years. Then a hospital technician offered one of hers

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CLEVELAND — For more than five years, Denise Butvin sat on a transplant list waiting and hoping for a new kidney to stay alive.

“My thing was if it came into my lap, it came into my lap. If it didn’t, those are the chances I would take,” Butvin said.

Butvin was officially diagnosed with kidney disease at the age of 51, but she has never experienced any symptoms. But eventually, she noticed a problem.

“With my blood work and my numbers, they kept going up and that’s the sign that your kidneys are failing.”

Determined to avoid dialysis, Butvin decided to start the process to get on the transplant list.

Five years passed.

Butvin was taking a routine stress test at University Hospitals Ahuja Medical Center in Beachwood, Ohio, when she met Erika Hosey, a cardiovascular technician.

“We were explaining the test, we were kind of chit-chatting and I notice she’s there for a pre-transplant evaluation,” Hosey said. “And I just say, 'well, do you have a donor?' and she says, 'no.' ”

Then without hesitation, Hosey said, “I have one to give you.”

Butvin said she was shocked that a stranger would make such an offer.

But for Hosey, it was just the right thing to do.

“I come from a family that has received and given,” she said. “More people were worried about me than I was about myself. I was not worried.”

Hosey applied to be a donor the next day. About a month or so later, she was on vacation when she got a call and learned she was a match.

“It was like a weight being lifted off of you and a reality was setting in,” Butvin said.

The two went in for surgery Dec. 11 and it went well. Now, they are both recovering with a month left until they will be back to complete normalcy.

Honoring Hosey, Butvin named her kidney “Erika.”

“She’s always with me wherever I go,” she said. “We’re connected now forever.”

With years added on to her life, Butvin plans to travel the world with her husband and continue her bond with Hosey, who she calls her angel. Hosey tells WEWS she plans to return to work in four to six weeks.

“It’s meant to be," Butvin said. "I mean, God said this is what’s going to happen and we’re putting you two together."

This story was originally published by Taneisha Cordell on WEWS.