Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Patient, 28, is embalmed alive in Russia

- By Lindsey Bever

It was supposed to be a simple procedure.

Relatives said Ekaterina Fedyaeva, 28, had been diagnosed with ovarian cysts — a condition in which fluid-filled sacs attach to the ovaries, then usually disappear on their own. But in some cases, doctors have to remove them.

Fedyaeva was advised that she needed a routine laparoscop­ic procedure to remove the cysts, relatives said, so she underwent surgery last month at a hospital in Ulyanovsk, a city in western Russia, according to RT, a Russian government-owned television network.

During the operation, medical personnel made a tragic and irreparabl­e mistake: Russia’s state-controlled news agency, Tass, reported that instead of administer­ing saline solution, medical personnel mistakenly gave Fedyaeva formalin, a solution that contains formaldehy­de, which is used to preserve dead bodies. The medical team tried to wash Fedyaeva’s abdominal cavity, according to Tass, but it was too late.

She was being embalmed — alive.

Fedyaeva’s mother-inlaw, Valentina Fedyaeva, told RT that after the operation, Fedyaeva told her mother, “Mom, I’m dying,” but her mother thought that she was just complainin­g. Then her organs started to fail, according to reports, and she was connected to machines to help keep her alive.

She died April 5, according to Tass.

Rashid Abdullov, minister of health, family and social well-being for the Ulyanovsk region, called it “a terrible tragedy.”

“My deepest condolence­s to the family, relatives of Ekaterina Fedyaeva,” Abdullov wrote on Twitter last week. “This is a terrible tragedy. We will provide all the necessary aid to the family.”

Several hospital personnel, including the head doctor, have been dismissed, and local authoritie­s have opened a criminal investigat­ion.

It’s still unclear how it happened, but Abdullov said that medical personnel neglected to read the label on the lethal chemical before administer­ing it to Fedyaeva during the operation, according to RT.

Russia’s Federal MedicalBio­logical Agency confirmed that Fedyaeva was transporte­d in critical condition from the hospital in Ulyanovsk to the A.I. Burnazyan Federal Medical and Biophysica­l Center in Moscow, where doctors and nurses tried to save her, according to RT. The government-owned network reported that she briefly regained consciousn­ess.

Fedyaeva’s mother-inlaw told RT that the woman opened her eyes and whispered to them — a moment that she said gave them hope. But her body could not clear the poison.

Family members and friends described Fedyaeva as a “sweet” and “tender” woman, according to news reports.

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