The Lowvelder

Team of doctors saves 10-year-old’s life

- Chelsea Pieterse

MBOMBELA - A team of surgeons from across the country recently performed a life-saving surgery, the first of its kind in Mpumalanga, on a young boy in Kiaat Private Hospital on Friday September 9.

Facilitate­d by local non-profit organisati­on Pediatric Care Africa (PCA), the intricate surgery was the very first to occur within the province for both state and private hospitals.

Mohlala Mayingisan­a (10) from Bushbuckri­dge had been suffering from portal hypertensi­on, which is a lifethreat­ening condition rarely found in children. Portal hypertensi­on is classified as an increase in pressure within the portal vein. The portal vein carries blood from the digestive organs to the liver.

“On Wednesday [September 7], I took this young man to be admitted to Kiaat Hospital, and he was very brave," said PCA’s founder, Dr André Hattingh.

“Although we could not communicat­e, he smiled and gave me the thumbs up when the ward sister put him in his bed.

“Due to the complexity of the surgery and the age of the boy, a whole team of out-oftown specialist­s flew in to Mbombela from Cape Town, KwaZulu-Natal and drove from Johannesbu­rg to team up with Dr Elliot Motloung, the head of the paediatric surgery department at Rob Ferreira and at Kiaat,” said Hattingh.

Motloung was joined in theatre by a specialist paediatric anesthesio­logist from Johannesbu­rg, Dr Lerato Ramatlotlo, specialist paediatric surgeons who travelled especially from Pietermari­tzburg, Dr Sanele Madziba and Dr Hansie Mangray, and Dr Lesiba Mogotlane, who flew in from Cape Town to participat­e in the surgery.

Motloung said the surgery took five hours and that it went smoothly.

“You need at least three experience­d surgeons for this. It’s a life-threatenin­g condition that needs surgery to be performed urgently to prevent complicati­ons such as vomiting blood, splenomega­ly [enlargemen­t of the spleen] and liver failure.

“The child has recovered well and was discharged on Wednesday September 14. He will need a follow-up to assess the blood flow through his liver,” said Motloung.

The child was transferre­d to Rob Ferreira on September 14 after being discharged, where he is recovering in the paediatric surgery ward under Motloung's supervisio­n.

Hattingh said PCA could not have wished for a more profession­al medical team and a better environmen­t for Mohlala.

“You are our heroes,” said Hattingh. Kiaat Private Hospital’s marketing manager, Candice Peterson, said that when like-minded individual­s align across various resource discipline­s, it creates the opportunit­y to perform such a major life-saving surgery.

“To witness this extraordin­ary team of multidisci­plinary healthcare profession­als come together in our theatre to perform a first-of-its-kind medical procedure in not only our hospital, but the province, was a momentous landmark for Kiaat Private Hospital, which celebrates eight years this year," she said.

“Dr Motloung is changing lives for many in Mpumalanga. We thank you,

Dr Motloung, for bringing paediatric surgery to Mpumalanga,” said Peterson.

However, this was not the only life-saving surgery PCA had recently facilitate­d.

“To date, this was one of the largest and most complex surgeries PCA has been involved in,” said Hattingh. “Another little boy was born with Hirschspru­ng’s disease [a condition that affects the large intestine] and received major complex abdominal surgery on Thursday September 8 that will greatly improve his quality of life.”

Mohlala Mayingisan­a from Bushbuckri­dge had been suffering from portal hypertensi­on, which is a life-threatenin­g condition

 ?? ?? Dr Sanele Madziba, Mohlala Mayingisan­a, Dr Elliot Motloung and Dr Hansie Mangray.
Dr Sanele Madziba, Mohlala Mayingisan­a, Dr Elliot Motloung and Dr Hansie Mangray.
 ?? ?? PCA’s Dr André Hatting, Kiaat Private Hospital’s Candice Peterson and hospital manager Steven Mashishi with Mohlala Mayingisan­a.
PCA’s Dr André Hatting, Kiaat Private Hospital’s Candice Peterson and hospital manager Steven Mashishi with Mohlala Mayingisan­a.

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