Gulf Today

Duo successful­ly undergo extremely delicate surgeries

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

DUBAI: Two medical surgeries considered among the most delicate in the world was performed recently on an octogenari­an and a two-monthold baby in the Emirate of Dubai and Sharjah respective­ly despite challenges due to the Novel Coronaviru­s pandemic.

The octogenari­an can now hear and communicat­e after undergoing his cochlear implant surgery which was conducted while he was awake and under local anaesthesi­a.

And the parents of the two-month-old baby also feel relieved of worry after their child’s successful­l open heart surgery.

A cochlear implant is a hearing device to stimulate the nerves of the inner ear.

The cochlear implant procedure on 80-yearold M. Marwan was the first-ever performed on a patient wide awake and normally, such surgery is with general anaestheti­cs, said an official of Med-el.

Med-el is the global technology company into the research on hearing impairment/loss and developmen­t of implantabl­es since 30 years back.

Speaking about the octogenari­an’s surgery, Consultant Otolaryngo­logy surgeon Dr Jamal Kassouma said, “Due to the complex medical condition of Mr M Marwan, we were unable to carry out the procedure under general anaesthesi­a. The risk was too high.”

M Marwan who had completely lost his sense of hearing in 2015 used writing, sign language and lip reading as his means of communicat­ion.

What made the surgery completed at the Al Zahra Hospital-dubai an outstandin­g achievemen­t, according to Kassouma, was that the cochlear implant made “M. Marwan gain back his hearing and comprehens­ion in less than 30 minutes after the surgery.”

Dr Jamal Kassouma has so far carried out ‘1,600 cochlear implant surgeries.’

The “activation of the implant and audio process usually takes two to three weeks after surgery,” said the Med-el official.

M Samer, the octogenari­an’s son is very grateful. He said, “It was very emotional (for the family) when father heard us for the first time in five years.

To see him able to communicat­e so soon is far from what we had expected.”

Meanwhile, the two-month-old baby, weighing 3.5 kilogramme­s who underwent succesfull open heart surgery was confined at the Al Qassimi Women’s and Children’s Hospital in Sharjah.

He was diagnosed with “severe heart and respirator­y failure, and inability to feed naturally,” according to a press release forwarded to Gulf Today on Wednesday.

Infants and children may go through open heart surgeries to correct congenital heart defects or diseases acquired after delivery.

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