New York Post

C-section you again

To save her son, she’s giving birth twice

- By ASIA GRACE

She really delivers.

After giving birth to her son, Levi James, last Wednesday, Jaiden Ashlea is due to give birth to him a second time in July.

It’s all part of an elaborate plan to save the baby’s life.

When the 23-year-old momto-be had a prenatal anatomy scan at 18 weeks of pregnancy in March, it showed that her son had spina bifida, a congenital defect that adversely affects a fetus’ spinal cord during gestation and can lead to learning and developmen­tal disabiliti­es and even paralysis. (Each year, roughly 1,427 babies are born with spina bifida, according to the CDC.)

A terrifying diagnosis

“I was in shock. I couldn’t even speak when the doctor was telling us this,” Ashlea, who works in digital content creation and real estate, told The Post.

Initially, doctors in her hometown of Jacksonvil­le, Fla., told her and fiancé Noah Detrick, 23, that their first child would be born “brain dead” and would have no chance at leading a quality life.

“I remember saying to myself, ‘This isn’t real, this isn’t happening,’ ” Ashlea said, adding that the physicians encouraged her to terminate the pregnancy. “It was a nightmare.”

But after getting second and third opinions from specialist­s in Orlando, which is about two hours away from her home, Ashlea learned that there was hope for her son. She could potentiall­y undergo a cutting-edge surgery to repair his spine while he was still gestating.

She underwent a barrage of medical tests — only a few hundred expecting mothers and their babies are deemed well enough to withstand the invasive treatment each year — before being approved for surgery at Orlando’s Winnie Palmer Hospital. Ashlea was the 31st mother ever to have the surgery at the hospital, one of just 12 medical facilities in the country that perform fetal surgeries. Such procedures typically cost upward of $25,000, and Ashlea’s was partially covered by insurance.

Roughly six weeks after the troubling diagnosis, Ashlea went under the knife. Doctors made a cesarean incision along her stomach, broke her water and successful­ly repaired the sizable lesion plaguing the L2 vertebra in the baby’s lower back. Then, they reposition­ed the tot inside Ashlea’s womb, sewed her up and put her on strict bed rest until the baby will be developed enough for an actual C-section delivery at 37 weeks. The procedure involved full anesthesia and took roughly six hours.

Ashlea is now about 27 weeks along and has noticed her baby’s health has improved.

Successful surgery

“Since the surgery, [doctors have] seen so much more movement, and signs of any malformati­on in his brain are reversing,” she said, adding that physicians now expect her son to have almost no issues walking.

He will, however, likely need to undergo physical therapy from birth until he’s at least 18 years old. But his post-op progress is promising nonetheles­s.

“He’s kicking his legs and twisting his ankles in there,” Levi James’ future mother gushed. “I can feel him moving.”

She’s scheduled to be discharged from the hospital early next week, and will continue her recovery in Orlando at a Ronald McDonald House, a nationwide nonprofit haven that provides health care for families and children in need. Then, she’ll return to Jacksonvil­le for the duration of her gestation.

She looks forward to one day telling her son about this journey to save his life.

“I’m excited for him to realize how many people were rooting for him, and how loved and special he is,” said Ashlea. “Not everyone gets the chance to have this surgery. And I want him to know that God was on his side.”

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BABY: Jaiden Ashlea (far right and above) had a C-section so that doctors could operate on her fetal son then put him back in her womb to finish gestation. A model of the baby shows the spinal defect doctors repaired.
OH BABY, BABY: Jaiden Ashlea (far right and above) had a C-section so that doctors could operate on her fetal son then put him back in her womb to finish gestation. A model of the baby shows the spinal defect doctors repaired.
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