Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
International

Premature Indian-Origin Baby Saved By Machine Lungs In London

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Nov, 2019 09:07 PM

    An Indian-origin baby, who was born prematurely at 30 weeks and was close to death with a respiratory infection, celebrated her first birthday recently thanks to a pioneering technique by doctors at a UK hospital that helped her breathe.


    Reva Malvankar weighed less than three pounds at birth last year and was close to death with a respiratory infection.


    Doctors at Evelina London Children’s Hospital and St. George’s Hospital in southwest London decided to employ a treatment never before tried on a baby so small and used a machine to take over her lung function.
    It extracted blood from her neck, adding oxygen and removing carbon dioxide before returning it to her groin, giving her lungs a rest, ‘The Times’ reports.


    “It was extremely distressing seeing her tiny body hooked up to such a big machine. [But] Reva wouldn’t be alive today without it. I’m eternally grateful,” said her mother Parnika Bhor, who has spoken about the treatment to thank the doctors for saving her daughter’s life.


    Reva was born at 30 weeks and spent six weeks in a neonatal ward but was discharged, showing no sign of a serious condition. But after three weeks at home she developed a respiratory infection.


    “At first she didn’t seem to be in any major discomfort but her temperature was very low. She then started to become very floppy so we took her to our local A&E [Accident & Emergency,” recalls Bhor.


    She was taken to St George’s and spent six days there with no improvement.


    “We were told that the respiratory infection was stopping her lungs from working properly and her life was in serious danger. We couldn’t bear the thought of losing Reva. We were completely broken,” the 42-year-old said.


    Bhor said the doctors told her that replacing her body’s lung function using extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was Reva’s “only option left” and she was moved to Evelina Hospital in London.


    Her condition started to improve after 10 days and doctors reduced her reliance on the oxygenation process, spending a total of two weeks on the machine. She spent a month in her local hospital before returning home and now has follow-up care from specialists at Evelina London.


    Dr Jon Lillie, a consultant in paediatric intensive care at Evelina London, told the newspaper: “We are so glad that Reva is thriving and doing well… We are unique in the UK in being able to offer this type of treatment to very small babies. Until now it hadn’t been attempted before as it was assumed that is wasn’t possible.”


    “We are very fortunate to have teams who are able to provide pioneering treatment like this. Placing a baby on [the oxygenation machine] is very challenging and requires lots of support from for our doctors, surgeons, nurses, therapists and perfusion team. Without it, Reva wouldn’t have survived.”

    MORE International ARTICLES

    At 17.5 Million, Indian Diaspora Largest In World, Says UN Report

    India was the leading country of origin of international migrants in 2019 with a 17.5 million strong diaspora, according to new estimates released by the United Nations, which said the number of migrants globally reached an estimated 272 million.

    At 17.5 Million, Indian Diaspora Largest In World, Says UN Report

    Every 4th Non-resident Foreign National In US In 2016 An Indian: Report

    Every 4th Non-resident Foreign National In US In 2016 An Indian: Report
    Every fourth non-resident foreign national in the US in 2016 was an Indian, according to a report which states that about 60 per cent of the resident non-immigrants were citizens of Asian countries, with those from China accounting for 15 per cent.

    Every 4th Non-resident Foreign National In US In 2016 An Indian: Report

    Heavy Rain Wreaks Havoc, Kills 2 In Houston Ahead Of ‘Howdy, Modi’ Event

    Tropical Depression Imelda slammed Texas on Thursday, causing devastating flooding, power outages and prompting urgent rescues and warnings across south-eastern Texas for people to stay indoors.    

    Heavy Rain Wreaks Havoc, Kills 2 In Houston Ahead Of ‘Howdy, Modi’ Event

    Pakistan Can Choose To Stoop Low, We Will Soar High: India Ahead Of UN Meet

    UN General Assembly: "What they want to do is their call. We've seen them mainstream terrorism in the past. And what you're now telling me is they may want to mainstream hate speech. It's their call, if they want to do that. Poison pens don't work for too long," he said.  

    Pakistan Can Choose To Stoop Low, We Will Soar High: India Ahead Of UN Meet

    Pakistan Activist Gulalai Ismail 'Escapes' To US, Seeks Political Asylum

    Ismail has launched a research and advocacy group called Voices for Peace and Democracy aimed at protecting women in the conflict-hit zones of the world.  

    Pakistan Activist Gulalai Ismail 'Escapes' To US, Seeks Political Asylum

    Modi's Houston Visit May Seal Major Energy Deal

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi's upcoming agenda-heavy US visit may start a new phase of corporate relations between major energy companies of the two countries.    

    Modi's Houston Visit May Seal Major Energy Deal