Gulf News

Love brings expat back from 80-day semi-coma

Husband’s dedication helps newlywed 31-year-old Nepalese expat pull through

- DUBAI BY SUCHITRA BAJPAI CHAUDHARY Senior Reporter

The dedication and love of a husband and the inspired efforts by a hospital’s medical team helped a Nepalese expatriate woman to come out of an 80-day semi-coma, which medical experts have termed miraculous.

Devi Lama Shreshtha, 31, woke up on April 9 to the reassuring sight of her husband by her bed.

Shreshtha was rushed to the Aster Hospital in Mankhool on January 16, six months into her pregnancy, for an acute illness that resulted in several life-threatenin­g complicati­ons and an emergency Caesarean section, of which she has no recall.

We took on the case as a challenge and at times were in doubt about her chances of survival. However, the unwavering love and dedication of her husband inspired us.” Dr Sherbaz Bichu | CEO, Aster Hospital

A31-year-old Nepalese expatriate who spent 80 days in a semi-comatose condition during which she had an emergency Caesarean section has woken up following a miraculous recovery, doctors said yesterday.

Devi Lama Shrestha woke up on April 9 and found her husband Lokendra Shrestha, 32, by her side at Aster Hospital in Mankhool, Dubai.

Dr Sherbaz Bichu, the hospital CEO, said it was a miracle. “We took on the case as a challenge and at times were in doubt about her chances of survival. However, the unwavering love and dedication of her husband inspired us. He told us we had to save his wife, otherwise he would die along with her. He held a vigil by her bedside all along and helped us keep our determinat­ion strong and steady throughout.”

Devi and Lokendra fell in love while working together at a popular coffee shop chain and married last year in June. Little did they know that such a close brush with death awaited Devi who was six months into her pregnancy.

“My wife was pregnant with our first child and was six months and four days into her pregnancy when she suddenly fell ill at work on January 16. She had high fever and severe vomiting bouts so I brought her to the hospital. However, after three days of hospital stay, she got worse and suddenly collapsed and had to be admitted to the ICU,” Shrestha told Gulf

News. Specialist in Internal Medicine Dr Chaitanya Prabhu, who treated her, said: “The patient came to us with Acute Respirator­y Distress Syndrome (ARDS) which is possible during pregnancy. Her lungs were inflamed with infection and filled with fluids. Apart from this primary complicati­on she had a very poor heart function with irregular rhythm.

“Her kidneys and her liver were affected and with this the chances of her survival were highly compromise­d. We also diagnosed a mitral valve defect which she will have to get operated for later.

“With all these complicati­ons we had to induce her into coma to put her under intensive medication protocol and she had to have a tracheosto­my and was put on a ventilator as she was not capable of breathing independen­tly.”

Due to risk of multi-organ failure, ARDS, her heart condition and muscle weakness, Devi could not sustain the pregnancy and underwent an emergency Caesarean section.

Usually patients are put on assisted breathing devices like ventilator­s for a maximum of 14 days and gradually weaned off, but Devi remained on the ventilator for a little over three months.

“She had lot of muscle weakness and her diaphgram muscles could not carry out independen­t breathing,” said Dr Jyoti Upadhaya, an internal medicine specialist on the team.

“Many times we had doubts about her survival and we consulted our ICU teams in India to review if there was something we had got wrong. It was a touch-and-go situation but Devi was a determined patient, fighting for her life silently and the ICU team too puts its heart and soul in caring for her round the clock. Usually, patients are not put on ventilator­s for so long. They are weaned off after a few weeks.”

Devi has been moved to a regular room and is undergoing active physiother­apy to regain strength so that she can recover her strength and move back to her village Kothung in Nepal.

She recalls nothing of the past 100 days except a recurrent dream that she was travelling in a train with people. “I could see a lot of Feng Shui signs along my journey and one woman whose face I cannot recall, took special care of me. Probably she was my guardian angel,” said Devi, grateful to be alive.

A graduate in English literature, Devi now plans to return to her village in Khotung Nepal and open a linguistic academy.

“In my village children are not taught the proper pronunciat­ion in English. I had earlier saved money and opened a boarding school in Kathmandu which had to be disposed off. Now I plan to open a school from kindergart­en to high school where the right kind of education is imparted to the children of my village,” she said. Dr Prabhu said it would take another six months for full rehabilita­tion.

Now I plan to open a school from kindergart­en to high school where the right kind of education is imparted to the children of my village.” Devi Lama Shrestha | Nepalese expatriate

 ??  ?? Devi Lama Shreshtha
Devi Lama Shreshtha
 ?? Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News ?? Devi Lama Shrestha, a Nepalese woman, with her husband Lokendra Kumar Shrestha (second from right) and Dr Chaitanya Prabhu (left) and Dr Jyoti Upadhyay (right) after she recovered completely from a coma induced by multiple organ failure.
Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News Devi Lama Shrestha, a Nepalese woman, with her husband Lokendra Kumar Shrestha (second from right) and Dr Chaitanya Prabhu (left) and Dr Jyoti Upadhyay (right) after she recovered completely from a coma induced by multiple organ failure.
 ?? Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News ??
Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News
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