Doctors
carried out life-saving surgery on Wednesday on an Indian baby
suffering from a rare disorder that caused her head to swell to nearly
double its size, in a case that aroused sympathy worldwide.
AFP
was given access to film the surgery on 15-month-old Roona Begum,
during which doctors used a surgical drill to pierce her skull before
draining fluid from her head in an operation lasting more than an hour.
The
youngsters’ parents, who have spent the last month at the hospital on
the outskirts of New Delhi, spoke of their joy and relief after the
operation which doctors described as exemplary.
“The
surgery went perfectly, much better than expected,” neurosurgeon
Sandeep Vaishya said in an exclusive interview with AFP inside the
theatre.
“It’s definitely a success but it’s too early to say what the quality of her future life will be like,” Vaishya added.
Roona was born with hydrocephalus, a condition that causes cerebrospinal fluid to build up on the brain.
She was found in an Indian village last month living with parents who are too poor to pay for treatment.
Publication
of pictures taken by an AFP photographer in the remote northeastern
state of Tripura prompted a hospital, run by the private Fortis
Healthcare group, to offer to treat Roona for free.
Vaishya,
who heads the hospital’s neurosurgery unit, made a series of swift
incisions along the right side of her head and stomach during
Wednesday’s operation.
He then used a drill to pierce her skull before inserting a shunt, catheter and valve.
Doctors
were then able to drain the fluid out of her head and towards her
abdomen where it could be absorbed easily into the bloodstream.
Her
father 18-year-old Abdul Rahman, who was too nervous to speak to the
doctors on the morning of the operation, said he was “hugely relieved”
that the surgery was successful.
“My
wife and I were both so worried this morning. But now when the doctor
says everything went well, I feel hugely relieved. It’s been a stressful
wait,” Rahman told AFP.
When
Roona was born, local doctors told her parents to take her to a private
hospital in a big city but the costs were too high for Rahman, an
illiterate labourer who earns Rs150 (Dh10) a day.
Roona’s
condition had caused her head to swell to a circumference of 94
centimetres, putting pressure on her brain and making it impossible for
her to sit upright or crawl.
On
admission, Vaishya estimated her head weight amounted to half her total
weight, leading him to believe that her body would struggle to absorb
all the liquid if a shunt procedure were carried out immediately.
So
he decided to drain the fluid from her head into an external plastic
bag and continued the process until the circumference had shrunk to
about 60 centimetres, allowing him to perform Wednesday’s surgery.
Roona
regained consciousness soon after the surgery. The sight of her bruised
and bandaged head provoked her mother, 25-year-old Fatema Khatun, to
sob inconsolably until Vaishya reassured her of the operation’s success.
Vaishya told AFP the child would need further surgery to reduce the size of her head.
“While
the shunt will keep the head from getting bigger, the head is still too
large at the moment. We will remodel her skull, move the bones and fix
them with plates to reduce her head size so she can grow normally,” he
said.
The
shunt surgery is the most common treatment for hydrocephalus, a
condition that affects about one in every 500 children, according to the
US government’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke.
Vaishya said Roona would still need “extensive physiotherapy” to allow her to lead a fully functional life.
“Her
neck muscles are very underdeveloped, so she will need more nutrition
and extensive physiotherapy to make her stronger. Her body will have to
grow strong so she can learn to sit up and move about and live a normal
life.”
In
an interview after his daughter was admitted to the hospital, Rahman
said he had prayed constantly for a “miracle” to save his little girl.
“The
day she was born, then itself the doctor said there were no guarantees
she would survive,” he told AFP. “I figured we would do our best for as
long as we could and Allah would help us with the rest.” [AFP]
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