Khaleej Times

Smallest baby discharged after 132-day care

- IANS

mumbai — Nirvaan, India’s smallest and youngest pre-term baby born after 22 weeks only, who had to remain in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) for 132 days, was discharged from a city hospital here on Friday, said hospital authoritie­s.

According to doctors, Nirvaan was treated by a team of 14 doctors and 50 nursing staff. The baby, who was born on May 12, 2017 during the 22nd week of pregnancy, had a birth weight of 610 gms, with 22 cm head size and a length of 32 cm.

“Nirvaan had immature lungs at birth requiring ventilator­y support right from the labour room. He required respirator­y support for 12 weeks which included six weeks of ventilator support. Multiple doses of surfactant injections were instilled into the breathing tube to expand his lungs,” said Bhupendra Avasthi, Director of Surya Child Care, Surya Hospital.

Explaining the complicati­ons, Avasthi said the patient survived life threatenin­g events such as pneumothor­ax (air accumulati­on around the lungs) and brain bleeds to emerge as a victor.

“A month-long steroid treatment was needed to help him breathe on his own. The steroid treatment also increased his risk of having infection and high blood sugars which required antibiotic and insulin therapy. Multiple blood transfusio­ns, LASER treatment of eyes and hernia surgery were also required during this period. Oral feeds could be given only after three months of age,” said Avasthi.

Medical science says that infants born between 22 and 24 weeks of pregnancy are considered periviable infants or infants born at the limits of viability, as a foetus may not exist independen­t of the mother prior to 22 weeks.

Medically, when it comes to 22week gestation premature infants, 40-50 per cent of them are born dead worldwide. Among those born alive, less than five per cent continue to survive. The surviving infants are at high risk of having serious neuro developmen­tal disability such as cerebral palsy, mental retardatio­n, hearing loss, visual impairment and epilepsy. —

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