Sarah Danh, a 27-year-old labor and delivery nurse, is arriving in San Antonio Tuesday evening via a specialized medical evacuation flight. The emergency transport concludes a harrowing two-week ordeal in Japan, where Danh’s honeymoon turned into a fight for survival following a sudden and unexplained collapse of her liver function.
Danh is traveling alongside her husband, Luke Gradl, 28, aboard an AirMed international transport. The flight, which coincides exactly with the couple’s one-month wedding anniversary, was made possible through a coordinated effort between Danh’s employer, Methodist Hospital Stone Oak, and HCA Healthcare.
The corporate intervention follows a critical “life-threatening health decline” that began on April 9, just two days after the couple arrived in Japan. While the medical flight provides a logistical victory, Danh remains in critical condition.
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Despite having “no health signs” of illness during her March 21 wedding, Danh’s condition deteriorated rapidly. Investigative medical reports indicate she is suffering from acute liver failure and hepatic encephalopathy—a severe neurological decline caused by the liver’s inability to filter toxins from the bloodstream.
Symptoms reported by her family include:
- Jaundice and high fever
- Kidney failure
- Increased intracranial brain pressure
- Extreme cognitive unresponsiveness
The precise etiology of the organ failure remains unknown. Upon arrival in San Antonio, Danh will undergo immediate, intensive diagnostic evaluations to determine the cause of the systemic collapse.
The San Antonio community and donors worldwide have rallied behind the nurse, raising over $167,000 via GoFundMe to offset the astronomical costs of international critical care and emergency evacuation.
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“That generosity means more to us than we can put into words,” Gradl and Danh’s mother, Le Le, stated in a joint release. They extended gratitude to the Japanese medical teams who stabilized Danh for the trans-Pacific flight and the San Antonio clinicians prepared to take over her care.
While AirMed and HCA Healthcare have not issued formal statements citing privacy regulations, the successful extraction of a U.S. citizen in such a precarious state marks a significant milestone in her recovery journey. Danh’s prognosis remains guarded as she enters the next phase of treatment on American soil.