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(This is from the Knoxville newspaper.)
   Knox boy doing well after heart transplant

   NASCAR driver lends helping hand

   July 19, 1999

By Jeannine F. Hunter, News-Sentinel staff writer


   When Peyton Boling, 2, awoke Sunday, he asked for pizza.
   His mother, Melody Boling gleefully prepared handmade pizzas and fed
   him throughout Sunday.

   "It's been a long time since he's eaten like this," Boling said, in her family's
   temporary apartment in Nashville, within a few miles of Vanderbilt
   Medical Center.

   On July 9, Peyton had a heart transplant. The child, named after former
   University of Tennessee quarterback Peyton Manning, was released from
   the hospital Friday.

   For the next two months, Peyton and his parents, who live in Mascot in
   East Knox County, will stay in Nashville so they are close to doctors who
   need to monitor Peyton's progress.

   In 1998, the child was diagnosed with Kawasaki Syndrome, a rare and
   potentially fatal disease that allows aneurysms and blood clots to reduce
   blood flow to the heart.

   "He's wrestling around. He's his wild and crazy self, my doll," Melody
   Boling said of her only child. "He had surgery eight days (ago) and it
   doesn't even seem like it's bothering him. He's eating us out of house and home.
   But that brings a huge smile to our faces. He never wanted to eat before, but
   now he eats like a man."

   Brent Boling, Peyton's father, said doctors said his son probably set a
   record for being able to leave the hospital within seven days after a heart
   transplant.

   Peyton's road to recovery includes a daily cocktail of eight medications
   taken four times a day. The child must stay away from many people, in a
   very sterile environment.

   "He is on heavy doses of anti-rejection drugs which affect his immune
   system so he could catch the slightest germs," Melody Boling said. "The
   doctors want him to be free of any infection."

   Helping the child during the 14-month wait for a new heart became a
   communal effort.

   NASCAR stock car driver Rusty Wallace donated use of his jet.

   Manning, a second-year Indianapolis Colts quarterback, visited Peyton
   and gave him an autographed Colts jersey.

   Tennessee football coach Phillip Fulmer has sent encouraging letters and
   items autographed by the Vols.

   The Knoxville-based Huffaker Family Foundation has established a fund
   to help pay medical and living expenses after the surgery. Ray Huffaker of
   Strawberry Plains is a business associate of Wallace's.

   "Rusty Wallace and Ray Huffaker have spent thousands of dollars to fly
   us around," she said. "Rusty Wallace doesn't know us, but he wanted to help
   us and that is unfathomable."

   The family's faith in God and prayers from many people helped sustain her
   family, said Melody Boling, a special-education teacher at Carter Middle
   School.

   "People have been incredibly supportive," she said. "Peyton has been
   prayed for; that is the only way Brent and I could sleep at night."

   She hoped the widespread support encouraged people to sign up to
   become organ donors.

   And she hoped peace befalls Peyton's donor's family. The donor was an
   unidentified 22-month-old toddler who died in Memphis.

   "For 14 months we had been praying for them as much as for Peyton
   because we knew a family would have to experience death," she said.

   Later she said, "We are so incredibly grateful. I can't imagine at the worst
   possible time when my child is dying someone asking us to give more.

   "That is an extremely selfless act. They are strong and to say we are
   blessed doesn't even touch it. They need prayers just as much as Peyton does."



Since this article was printed, Peyton has had many ups and downs. He and his family are still in Nashville and Peyton is doing quite well. There is however, still a risk for rejection, but he's in good hands and hopefully everything will be just fine. He's definately in our thoughts and prayers and we wish you the best Peyton.
Rusty also carried a "Get Well Peyton" sticker on the roll bar of his car on August 7, 1999 at the Brickyard 400.


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