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World-first lung surgery saved baby in mother`s WOMB

14 March 2012 [18:59] - TODAY.AZ
A baby`s life was saved by pioneering surgery after doctors carried out an operation on her lungs while she was still in her mother`s womb.

Alaitz Corominas, from Spain, is now a happy and healthy toddler after becoming the world`s first foetus to undergo the procedure three months before she was due to be born. The 16-month-old girl, who weighed just 1lb 10oz at the time, had only a 10 per cent chance of survival if surgeons in Barcelona had not fixed her blocked bronchial tubes. Experts inserted an endoscope – a camera-ended tube that surgical instruments can fit through – into her mouth and then down her windpipe and into her lungs.

An image of her lungs was then beamed on to a giant TV screen in the operating theatre and confirmed that she was suffering from bronchial atresia.

This where the bronchi - the air tube leading from the trachea to the lungs - do not properly connect with the central airways, meaning breathing is almost impossible. Surgeons from two institutions – Hospital Clinic and Joan de Deu -  reconnected the bronchial tubes on the right lung to her central airways in a procedure lasting just 30 minutes.

`In such cases, you have to operate quickly, like a bank robbery,` said Eduard Gratacos, who led the surgery. However, they had to be extremely delicate because the procedure is carried out near the heart on `tissue as thin as cigarette paper`, Dr Graticos added. To complicate things further, the heart is at risk of filling with liquid and can require restarting. Luckily this did not happen. At the time of the operation, Alaitz, whose name means `Joy` in her parents` native Basque language, was operated on during her mother`s 26th week – or six-month mark - of pregnancy. She went on to nearly complete a full nine-month term and was born in November 2010 weighing 5lb 8oz. After 30 weeks, doctors prefer to operate on the baby outside of the uterus as it is less complicated. But Alaitz`s case, she was too young to be removed and would be is unlilely to have survived on the outside, even if they had operated on her lungs. One of the main dangers is the risk of triggering early labour.

This is why the task had to be carried out so quickly. However, it means that surgeons can only concentrate on one task and often means that other problems cannot be dealt with. Thirteen days after Alaitz was born, she underwent an operation to remove two of the three pulmonary lobes of her right lung which were damaged by the malformation of her bronchi. Doctors said their removal will not affect her health and quality of life.


/dailymail.co.uk/
URL: http://www.today.az/news/interesting/104115.html

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