Pre-term baby weighing 631g delivered, saved
Abu Dhabi hospital doctors save life of baby born prematurely at 26.5 weeks
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Dubai: A premature baby girl weighing just 631 grams was delivered at
Medeor 24X7 Hospital, Abu Dhabi. The smallest patient was born
prematurely at 26.5-week gestation, a hospital spokesperson said.
Dubbed
as a ‘miracle baby’, the little girl was safely delivered after a
high-risk pregnancy due to the efforts and expertise of the
multi-speciality obstetrics section and advanced Level 3 Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit (NICU) led by Dr Govinda Shenoy, head, Neonatology
Unit, and Dr Mary Roberts, senior obstetrician, with the assistance of
experienced medical staff from the hospital’s anaesthesiology, intensive
care, cardiology, ophthalmology and radiology departments along with
expert laboratory personnel. The baby who was discharged last month
after a three-month stay at the NICU weighed nearly 2kg.
Dr Shenoy
said: “The timely intervention and delivery of the baby was important
as the mother, who had a high-risk pregnancy, came to us displaying
symptoms of severe pre-eclampsia, which is a pregnancy-related
complication that is accompanied by high blood pressure and potential
damage to organs. She was also carrying a growth-retarded foetus with
oligo-hydramnios (a lack of amniotic fluid around the foetus) and absent
end diastolic flow (a condition which increases the risk of fetal and
neonatal mortality). The baby was successfully delivered by a Lower
(uterine) Segment Caesarean Section (LSCS) procedure, after which both
the mother and infant were kept under careful observation. The baby was
placed under the care of the expert neonatology team in the
state-of-the-art neonatal unit.”
Dr Shenoy said the care of
preterm babies was critical especially for infants as young as 26 weeks
and weighing under 1000gm, as these factors could pose several serious
health risks for the child. “These include respiratory distress
syndrome, pneumothorax (abnormal collection of fluid in the pleural
area), bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intraventricular and intracranial
bleeding leading to post-haemorrhagic hydrocephalus, patent ductus
arteriosis (a condition that causes cardiac problems), retinopathy
caused by prematurity that can lead to blindness, birth asphyxia,
hypoxia and haemorrhage leading to convulsions and other neurological
deficits later in life.
“Other dreaded complications include
septicaemia and meningitis and the possibility of developing necrotising
enterocolitis (where portions of the bowel undergo necrosis or tissue
death). Feeding problems, intolerance of feeds and electrolyte imbalance
is quite common. Anaemia caused due to prematurity (which requires
multiple blood transfusions) and osteopenia (a medical condition in
which the protein and mineral content of bone tissue is reduced) are
other problems commonly seen in preterm babies who are severely
underweight,” said Dr Shenoy.
Dr Shenoy also said that the
hospital had recently seen an increase in the demand for intensive care
for more preterm babies. “We are well positioned and trained to fulfil
the demands of the community and provide the best overall care for
babies in Abu Dhabi,” he said.
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