Gulf News

Dubai boy undergoes rare surgery

KERALA DOCTORS REMOVE CANCEROUS TUMOUR FROM HIS HEART

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Two-year-old survives a nine-hour operation in India where he was rendered clinically dead to remove a cancerous tumour from his heart |

ADubai-based twoyear-old Indian boy survived a ninehour surgery in India where he was rendered clinically dead so doctors could remove a massive cancerous tumour from his heart.

Aadhi Thoppil Fabeer underwent deep hypothermi­c circulator­y arrest (DHCA) so doctors could operate on him to remove a 200-gram (almost the weight of an average pomegranat­e) intracardi­ac yolk sac germ cell tumour in his heart, Indian media reported.

The surgical technique meant doctors had to bring down the boy’s body temperatur­e to 15C. The human body’s normal temperatur­e is 37C. It starts to shut down and quickly die once the core body temperatur­e drops below 22C.

An team of 30 doctors attended to Aadhi whose condition was extremely rare, which was discovered just recently,

Times of India reported. Dr M.K. Mossa Kunhi, head of the Cardiac Surgery and Heart Transplant­ation Department at VPS Lakeshore Hospital in Kochi, led the team that operated on Aadhi.

“The surgery was the fifth successful surgery performed in the world,” Dr Kunhi said.

“On all the four other cases, the tumour was reported inside the heart. But in this case the tumour was inside and outside the surface of the heart,” he added.

Aadhi’s parents discovered his condition after he developed a fever recently. His parents, who have been working in Dubai for the past 10 years, took him to a hospital in Dubai for treatment.

Merin Fabeer, Aadhi’s mother, said she and her husband decided to take their son to Kochi for treatment although their doctors here denied them permission to travel.

Dr Kunhi said Aadhi was in critical condition on arriving at the hospital since 95 per cent of his blood circulatio­n had already been blocked by the tumour.

“The child was breathless and we suspect that he developed the tumour during intrauteri­ne life,” Dr Kunhi said.

The yoke sac tissue develops on the third day of pregnancy but usually dissolves within a month. In Aadhi’s case, the tissue developed into a malignant tumour. Doctors said this tumour commonly grows in reproducti­ve organs and it is extremely rare for it to develop in the heart.

‘Infiltrate­s heart muscle’

“It is a very rare condition and I have not seen one such case in my career. It is an extremely difficult surgery to perform as the tumour infiltrate­s the heart muscle and comes out,” said Dr Jose Chako Periappura­m, Lisie Hospital’s cardiac surgeon, who has performed 17 heart transplant­s to date.

“We operated on him on Eid day and now he is doing fine. He needs chemothera­py course once in three weeks about three to four times. He was given his first chemo course on Saturday,” Dr Kunhi said.

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