Gulf News

Judith gets back on her feet after rare surgery

CHALLENGIN­G OPERATION HELPS STRAIGHTEN OUT S-SHAPED LIMBS OF 12-YEAR OLD GIRL

- By Senior Reporter

Ayear after she went through a difficult surgery to straighten her left leg, 12-year old Judith Rattananay­ke went under the surgeon’s knife again on Wednesday to straighten her right leg.

The bright girl studying in grade 6 suffers from a rare form of dwarfism called Achondropl­asia which made her stop growing physically after the age of two.

This not only resulted in stunted growth, but twisted her lower limbs into S-shaped distortion­s, causing severe pain and difficulty in carrying out regular chores. Surgery on the second leg was the second phase of a difficult two-year project.

The rare surgery called Illizarov Technique that uses an external fixator with pins and conducted in Dubai by paediatric orthopaedi­c surgeon Dr Marc Sinclair helps keep the bone straight and removes the twists and distortion­s. The entire project will eventually cost more than Dh800,000 and is being done for free under the aegis of the UK-based charity The Little Wings Foundation as Judith’s parents Renuka and Mangala Rattanayak­e, are unable to afford the costs.

Since the first surgery, not only has the bone in that leg straighten­ed out, Rattanayak­e has already gained 1.5cm on her one-metre tall frame. Rattanayak­e is likely to gain approximat­ely 4cm after the completion of this two-year project which began in February last year and finally concludes when her limbs are straighten­ed completely by 2016.

“I know the surgery is painful as I have been suffering from pain the whole year with 16 pins put into my bone. But now my left leg is straight and I am able to walk with the help of a walker, I am able to do things like getting into bed unassisted, living without the severe cramps and joint pain that kept me awake all night. I do not mind this pain, because eventually after this leg straighten­s out I will be able to do simple things like switching on the light button in my room, walking to my classroom without help, going to the washroom unassisted and living a life free of pain,” said Rattanayak­e who will be in hospital for three days after surgery and plans to take her second term exams at her school from next week.

“My daughter is really bright and hardworkin­g and her teachers at St Mary’s High School acknowledg­e that. They have been very helpful and cooperativ­e and have had her classroom on the ground floor. This year she missed school only for a month last February after the surgery and despite the painful frame around her leg, went to school on a wheelchair and did very well in all her exams and projects. After the first surgery in her right leg, she will require a second one after three months in the upper part of her limb.

“This time Dr Sinclair is not doing surgery in the entire leg to spare her excruciati­ng pain. She will have only six pins inserted in her bone,” said her mother Renuka.

Dr Sinclair said: “Judith is attending physiother­apy and mobilising her joints after the fixator was removed. Her second leg will be approached in stages, rather than correcting it in the same way as the first. I hope that in dividing it up, it will be less stressful for her.”

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