Showing posts with label Doctor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doctor. Show all posts

Friday, 21 October 2016

Medical: Nigerian surgeon removes baby from mother's womb, operates on her tumor & returns her back


LynLee Hope who suffered from a tumor know a 'sacrococcygeal teratoma'  underwent a crucial operation at 23 weeks and then returned to her mother's womb. She healed and continued to grow until she was born again at 36 weeks. This amazing feat was performed by a surgeon who is  Nigerian but  based in the U.S , Dr Oluyinka Olutoye, and his surgeon partner , Dr. Darrell Cass of Texas Children's Hospital
When Margaret Boemer went for a routine ultrasound 16 weeks into her pregnancy with her third child, she found out that things were far from routine.

"They saw something on the scan, and the doctor came in and told us that there was something seriously wrong with our baby and that she had a sacrococcygeal teratoma," the Plano, Texas, mom said in an interview shared by Texas Children's Hospital. "And it was very shocking and scary, because we didn't know what that long word meant or what diagnosis that would bring,"

Sacrococcygeal teratoma is a tumor that develops before birth and grows from a baby's coccyx, the tailbone.  Found more often in girls than boys, this tumor occurs in one out of every 35,000 births.
"This is the most common tumor we see in a newborn," said Dr. Darrell Cass, co-director of Texas Children's Fetal Center and associate professor of surgery, pediatrics and obstetrics and gynecology at Baylor College Medicine. "Even though it's the most common we see, it's still pretty rare."
Booemer had been pregnant with twins, but lost one of the babies before her second trimester so it was a shock at 16 weeks to learn of her daughter's rare birth defect.
"Some of these tumors can be very well-tolerated, so the fetus has it and can get born with it and we can take it out after the baby's born," said Cass. "But about half of the time, they cause problems for the fetus and it's usually causing problems because of a blood flow problem." 
Cass explained that the tumor is trying to grow by sucking blood flow from the baby, yet the baby is also trying to grow, too "so it becomes a competition. And in some instances, the tumor wins and the heart just can't keep up and the heart goes into failure and the baby dies," he said.

With a large tumor stealing the blood supply, Boemer's fetus was becoming more ill each day, doctors explained to the expectant mother. Something had to be done.
Although other doctors had advised her to terminate the pregnancy, Cass and his team told her about another possibility: fetal surgery. This option, though, would not be an easy road. Even worse, her baby's chances of survival would be grim.
"LynLee didn't have much of a chance," Boemer said. "At 23 weeks, the tumor was shutting her heart down and causing her to go into cardiac failure, so it was a choice of allowing the tumor to take over her body or giving her a chance at life. It was an easy decision for us: We wanted to give her life.
She was 23 weeks and 5 days pregnant, when Cass and his partner surgeon, Dr. Oluyinka Olutoye, performed the emergency fetal surgery. By this time, the tumor was nearly larger than the fetus. They operated for about five hours.
"The part on the fetus we do very, very quickly," said Cass. "It's only 20 minutes or so on the actual fetus." Most of the time is spent opening the uterus, which he described as "a big muscle lined with membranes. We don't want the mom's health to be jeopardized," said Cass, who explained they work carefully, both making the incision and sewing it up in order "to make that uterus be as sealed and as water tight as possible."
Still, Cass said, the tumor in this case was so large a huge incision was needed to get to it, "so it ended up that the baby was hanging out in the air... Essentially, the fetus is outside, like completely out, all the amniotic fluid falls out, it's actually fairly dramatic," said Cass.

During the surgery, LynLee's heart slowed down to an incredibly low rate.
"It basically stopped," said Cass. He credits the heart specialist, a key member of the team, for giving the right medication and transfusing the right amount of fluid, allowing the surgeons to continue their work. The surgical team removed the bulk of the tumor. When they finished their operation, the surgeons placed LynLee back inside the womb and sewed her mother's uterus shut. It's kind of a miracle you're able to open the uterus like that and seal it all back and the whole thing works," said Cass.
Boemer was on bed rest for the remainder of her pregnancy. Despite her pain, she marshaled her strength and made it another 12 weeks to nearly 36 weeks -- full term -- when Lynlee Hope was born for the second time via C-section on June 6. She weighed 5 pounds and 5 ounces.

After she was born, LynLee faced one more ordeal: removing the bits of tumor that surgeons could not reach, which had begun to grow again.
"At eight days old, she had more surgery, and they were able to remove the rest of the tumor," explained Boemer. LynLee recovered in the NICU and weeks later, arrived in her family home. Baby Boemer is still an infant but is doing beautiful," said Cass, remarking that she is perfectly healthy. His one previous surgery of this kind was also a success. "I think she's about 7 now, and she sings karaoke to Taylor swift -- she's completely normal," said Cass. 
Source: CNN

Thursday, 20 October 2016

Kaduna to establish emergency medical services



The Kaduna State Government says it will establish the state’s emergency medical services to improve access to healthcare in the state in 2017.
According the 2017 budget sent to the Kaduna State House of Assembly, the project will gulp N62.9 million.
Of the amount, N2 billion would also be spent on construction of a 300-bed specialist hospital.
A further breakdown of the budget obtained by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) from the state’s Ministry of Budget and planning indicated that the health sector had an allocation of N10.3 billion for capital projects as against N6.6 billion in 2016.
The document said that about N1.4 m would be spent on upgrading and equipping of General hospitals across the state, while N23.8 million would be set aside for landscaping of major hospitals.
It also indicated that N69.2 million would be set aside for malaria control programme and N20 million for Tuberculosis and leprosy control, while Onchocerciasis was allocated N10.5 million.
The budget proposal also indicated that the state’s Primary Healthcare Agency would get N4.2 billion for capital projects out of which N2.9 billion would be spent on renovation and upgrade of 255 health faculties to primary health care centres.
About N186.9 million was allocated to Shehu Idris College of Health Science and Technology, Makarfi, N179.6 million to Kaduna State College of Nursing and Midwifery, Kafanchan and N118 million to Kaduna State College of Midwifery, Kaduna.
The Drug Medical Supplies Management Agency was also projected to receive N1 billion out of which N100 million would be spent on procurement of family planning and reproductive health commodities and consumables.
It also said that “N130 million will also be spent on procurement of therapeutic food and drugs for management of acute malnutrition.
The budget also indicated that N409 million had been allocated to the Kaduna State Aids Control Agency (KADSACA), out of which N90 million would be spent on counselling and testing of 500, 000 persons.
“The ARV programme will gulp N233.4 million, HIV care and support activities, N30 million to condom programme, N50 million and N4 million to scale up adolescent and youths population intervention in 21 LGAs,” it said.
The Government budgeted to spend N215.9 billion in the 2017 fiscal year, out of which N130.3 billion had been earmarked for capital and N85.5 billion for recurrent expenditures.

Tuesday, 16 August 2016

Doctor arrested for killing six, burying bodies

Police have arrested a doctor in western India for allegedly injecting six people with a lethal overdose and burying most of the bodies at his farmhouse, an officer said Tuesday.
Santosh Pol, dubbed “Doctor Death” by local media, was arrested in a town in Maharashtra state last week during a police investigation into the disappearance of one of his victims.
“Pol has confessed to killing around six people including five women and one man. We have recovered four bodies from his farmhouse and one from (outside) his (town) residence,” police inspector Padmakar Ghanvat told AFP.
“He has been constantly changing his statements during interrogations, which makes it difficult for us to understand his motives,” Ghanvat said.
All of the alleged victims went missing in the picturesque town of Wai, 230 kilometres (143 miles) south of Mumbai, in recent years. But little is known of their connection to the doctor.
Television footage showed police leading Pol around his farm, while other officers operated mechanical diggers as curious villagers watched.
Police have also taken Pol’s nurse into custody on suspicion of helping him carry out some of the killings, officers have been quoted by local media as saying.
Pol allegedly killed his latest victim with a lethal overdose of an unknown drug after she threatened to expose his previous murders, according to the reports.
Last year police arrested an Indian doctor accused of trying to set a patient’s body on fire after he died during treatment.
Earlier this month Indian police arrested the head of an upmarket hospital in Mumbai and four doctors on suspicion of organ trafficking.