Sudhir Choudhrie is involved in the medical field. He is involved in various charities in health and education throughout the USA, India, and the United Kingdom. In 1999 he underwent a heart transplant operation, which was successful at the Colombia University Medical Center in New York. The hospital stands out to be the primary benefactor of Sudhir’s contribution. After months of his health deteriorating when he was only seven, he was recommended for a heart transplant. The surgery he underwent makes him the most extended surviving heart transplant patient in the world. The process also led to the discovery that he had the titin gene linked to heart failure.
Sudhir has been able to give his family an excellent level of protection by increasing awareness of the titin gene’s testing presence within his family members. This is to highlight the early risk of developing heart dysfunctions.
Sudhir Choudhrie is also a bestseller of the book Life After Transplantation in London and other parts of the globe. After surviving the heart surgery, he wrote My Heart, A Tale of Life, Love, and Destiny. The novel entails details of a long life after the operation are complete. The book’s main reason was not to be a bibliography, and instead, it was to focus on the realities of going through heart transplants. Sudhir Choudhrie believes that individuals with a heart transplant experience must speak out and explain that a heart transplant does not necessarily mean a death sentence.
A heart transplant may mean a less life span, and Sudhir Choudhrie believes it is an opportunity for ambition and positivity to shine. Transitioning to a healthy diet and lifestyle may have a positive impact on the transplant. Healthy living also encourages healing. Sudhir Choudhrie also explains that healthy living enhanced his recovery and extended the life of the heart. It also reduced the chances of needing more surgeries. In 2009, Sudhir became a professor of cardiology at the Colombia University Medical Center. He established it to permit illustrious faculty members to pursue meaningful research and develop the next generation’s talented physician-scientists. He currently resides in London, United Kingdom.