Monday, October 06, 2008

4-yr-old Ponda girl braves three open-heart surgeries

4-yr-old Ponda girl braves three open-heart surgeries
TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Panaji: The Naute family from Ponda had lost their 14-year-old daughter to cancer. Their only hope was their yet -to-be-born child. Born on December 21, 2004 they named the baby Akansha, in memory of their late daughter.
Little did they anticipate that less than a month after their daughter’s birth, the doctors would open her heart to perform a gruelling operation. They still remember doctors telling them, “She is born with a rare and highly complex heart problem as she has a single pumping chamber (ventricle) with complete obstruction to the blood flow in the main blood vessel of the body”. The parents spent panicky moments, oscillating between hope and fear, as doctors informed them that they would have to perform three open-heart surgeries on her and the outcome was likely to be uncertain.
But little Akansha survived three operations and is now fit to join a play school. “It is a miracle. We are happy to see our four-year-old daughter happy and laughing after the final surgery last month,” said the couple.
Dr N S Devananda from Wockhardt hospitals, Bangalore, said that Akansha’s is a rare case. “This is the second case I’ve seen in my career. The child required complex surgeries but her recovery was good,” he said.
The doctor said that the first operation was done when Akansha was one month old as there was an obstruction in the heart. As part of the complex operation, the obstructed tube was cleared.
But it was not the end of her woes. Six months later, an angiogram showed that she had high pressure in the blood circulation to her lungs. Besides, a new obstruction to the flow of blood had been found in her heart. “The restrictive hole was widened, and the blood vessel from the heart to the lung was disconnected in the second surgery,” the doctor explained.
Two years later, a third heart surgery was performed. She developed a rare complication called aneurysm of the ventricle which had grown large. A final open heart surgery was done to repair the aneurysm. “These kinds of complications are very rare, wherein, along with an expected surgery, we had to perform another major surgery,” added Dr Devananda.

October 5,2008, The Times of India, Goa edition

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