The Prince George Citizen

Doctors save baby born with heart outside its body

- Lindsey BEVER The Washington Post

Immediatel­y after Vanellope Hope Wilkins was born, she was put in sterile plastic to protect her heart – which was beating outside her tiny chest.

It was a moment that her parents, Dean Wilkins and Naomi Findlay, had hoped for but were not certain would actually come – a moment in which their baby girl would come into the world, and live.

The newborn, who was born Nov. 22 at Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, England, was delivered by Caesarean section several weeks premature with a rare and often fatal congenital condition called ectopia cordis, in which the heart is growing either completely or partially outside the chest cavity. Most babies born with the malformati­on are stillborn or they do not survive long after birth.

Dozens of doctors, nurses and clinical staffers worked together late last month to deliver Vanellope and give her a chance to live.

A pediatric cardiologi­st there said the newborn may become the first to survive the condition in the United Kingdom.

In June, Wilkins and Findlay learned they were expecting their first child, according to the statement from the hospital.

They also learned early on that the fetus had an extremely rare condition and were told about the potential risks – that she could have other chromosoma­l abnormalit­ies or other issues, and that she could die before she would ever get to live.

Scans showed her heart and stomach growing outside her developing body. Weeks later, her stomach had entered her torso, but her heart had not.

The soon-to-be parents rejected advice to terminate the pregnancy. They sought help from specialist­s. They underwent blood tests to determine whether the fetus had major genetic disorders. “When the results of that test came back as low risk of any abnormalit­ies we jumped up and down in the living room and cried,” Wilkins said in the statement from the hospital. “At that point we decided to fight to give our daughter the best chance of surviving.” So the couple continued on. And on that Wednesday morning in November, less than an hour after Vanellope was born – after she was put in a sterile plastic bag to protect her heart, and after she was given a breathing tube, fluids and medication­s to help her heart beat strong – she was ready to undergo complex surgery to put it into place.

“At around 50 minutes of age, it was felt that Vanellope was stable enough to be transferre­d back to the main theater where she had been born to the waiting anesthetis­ts, congenital heart disease and pediatric surgical teams who began the task of put- ting her entire heart back inside her chest,” Jonathan Cusack, a consultant neonatolog­ist within the hospital system, said in the statement.

According to the hospital: “The actual defect in baby Vanellope’s chest wall was quite small. The main concern with reposition­ing her heart was that the arteries and veins which bring blood to and from the heart were extremely elongated, and might become kinked and blocked when the heart was placed inside the chest wall. To ensure this didn’t happen, the plan was to use a special splint to support the edges of the larger hole that had been created in the front of her chest, attached to its own plastic tube. This meant it was possible to hang her heart outside of her chest to help create more space within, and allow a plastic sheet to be stitched around it to seal the heart away from the outside air.”

Since then, Vanellope has had two additional surgeries – one to remove the supporting tube and another to place her heart behind the skin of her chest wall, Frances Bu’Lock, a consultant in pediatric cardiology, said in an email.

About one in every 126,000 babies is born with ectopia cordis, and about 90 per cent of them are either stillborn or die soon after birth, according to Children’s Hospital Colorado. That said, in most cases, babies born with the condition also have heart problems in addition to the heart’s unusual placement; typically babies who survive are ones like Vanellope, who seemingly have no other heart issues.

Jack Rychik, director of the Fetal Heart Program at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, said the prognosis hinges partly on the heart’s structure. In the heart, he said, there are four chambers – two on the top and two on the bottom – as well as vital vessels; but in most cases of ectopia cordis, the heart structure is affected – whether it be holes, blockages or other developmen­tal problems. Rychik said there are more anticipate­d favorable outcomes in cases without other heart problems.

In any case, Rychik said, the challenge with ectopia cordis is the heart needs to be put back into the chest, which is often filled with the lungs and other organs.

“So the way to think about this is, you sort of have to be a bit of an architect and reconstruc­t the chest around the heart and do so in a manner that does not compress the cardiac structures and allows for function and allows for growth of the chest,” he said.

Now three weeks old, the baby has “more strength than you could ever imagine,” Wilkins, her father, said, according to BBC News.

“She’s fighting it all the way and she’s defying everything, isn’t she?” he added, addressing the baby’s mother. “What they’re saying she can’t be doing, she’s doing it.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Naomi Findlay and Dean Wilkins look at their daughter, three-week-old Vanellope Hope Wilkins who was born with a rare condition in which the heart grows on the outside of the body, at Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, England on Monday. To see video...
AP PHOTO Naomi Findlay and Dean Wilkins look at their daughter, three-week-old Vanellope Hope Wilkins who was born with a rare condition in which the heart grows on the outside of the body, at Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, England on Monday. To see video...

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