The Free Press Journal

5.36kg bundle of joy arrives at Cama hospital

- STAFF REPORTER /

A 28-year-old mother-to-be from Mumbai had an unexpected­ly big bundle of joy when she gave birth to a healthy baby girl, weighing all of 5.360 kilograms, at the state-run Cama and Albless Hospital on September 28. The newborn's birth weight correspond­s to the average weight of a three-month-old in India. According to doctors, heavy babies are usually born to mothers with gestationa­l diabetes, but in this case, the mother did not have this condition nor does she have thyroid issues.

An average Indian baby weighs somewhere between 2.5 and 3.5kg, so the delivery of big babies could be a little risky, with the possibilit­y of post-partum haemorrhag­e, expansion of the Caesarean section (C-section) incision and damage to the blood vessels. “The newborn and the mother are under observatio­n and are stable,” said a doctor.

Dr Rajshree Katke, gynaecolog­ist and medical superinten­dent of the hospital, said the baby was delivered through C-section on September 28.

“The baby was delivered on time, but the mother, Kalpana Pore, had to undergo a C-section because of high blood pressure. The baby girl has been admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) ward of the hospital for further observatio­n,” she added.

This is the third time in the last eight years, the hospital has recorded the birth of a 'big' baby to a non-diabetic mother at Cama hospital. In 2011, a woman delivered a baby boy weighing 4.5 kilograms and in 2010, a baby weighing 4.3 kilograms was delivered at the hospital.

Dr Duru Shah, a renowned gynaecolog­ist said, alarm bells ring for doctors when a baby weighs more than four kilos. “These babies are potentiall­y diabetics and have to be monitored closely and there are very high chances that the mother has high blood sugar and may be prone to infections,” she added.

A study published in 'BMC Public Health', a peer-reviewed journal, says, "Children born large for gestationa­l age are prone to neonatal complicati­ons and developing insulin resistance, obesity, diabetes, and cardiovasc­ular disease later in life."

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