Pioneering Surgery Cures The Boy Whose Blood Flowed The Wrong Way


Three year old Alec Hutchinson, was born with a rare condition which caused the blood vessels in his heart were plumbed in back to front.

Only a handful of babies every year are born with the condition, which is called Congenitally Corrected Transposition.

In sufferers, the artery taking oxygenated blood to the body, the aorta, is connected to the smaller pumping chamber of the heart, the right ventricle.

This means it cannot create a large enough amount of pressure to push blood all the way round the body. As a result of this, Alec had low oxygen levels in his blood and was often breathless and blue.

Four weeks ago, the condition was corrected by a ‘double switch’ procedure to turn his heart vessels around.

Doctors gave Alec a 20% chance that he would not survive the operation – but thankfully everything went to plan.

Now that he has recovered, his prognosis is good and doctors believe that he should lead a normal life.

His mom says that:

“Alec is back to his old self, bossing everybody around. He’s been a brave lad. Since the operation he’s been able to ride his bike again.”

Because the double switch surgery was a success, surgeons at the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle will offer the procedure to other kids with the same condition.

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UK Toddler Surviving With An Artificial Heart


Ollie Drew is just 14 months old, but he is already making a name for himself around the world. He is currently the only person in the UK to be kept alive with an artificial heart.

The toddler has been attached to the Berlin Heart for 67 days at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital. The left side of his heart does not pump properly because the muscles have become “baggy” and his valves cannot shut properly. Brave Ollie underwent a seven-hour operation where two tubes were fed from his heart to the Berlin – which is bigger than he is.

At just seven months old, Ollie was diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy. This is a condition in which the heart becomes weakened and enlarged, and cannot pump blood efficiently

It can be inherited but doctors believe he developed it as the result of a virus.

The little boy was first diagnosed with bronchitis and it wasn’t until he had a chest X-Ray in Exeter that doctors discovered his condition.

At first, medics thought it could be controlled by drugs but, in September, Ollie started breathing too fast, which made it difficult to feed him.

He was rushed to the Bristol’s Children Hospital where her was placed on a ventilator in ICU. As doctors were discussing a transplant, the toddler went into cardiac arrest.

Since then he has been attached to the Berlin Heart machine, which is controlled by a laptop. It was designed as a bridge to keep the patient alive by doing the heart’s job while it recovers or until a transplant can be carried out.

Ollie’s parents have been keep a vigil by his bedside, but they are not appealing for a heart because for that to happen would take a tragedy elsewhere. They’re just taking it day by day and hoping he’s OK.

There are currently 81 people in the UK in need of a heart transplant, of which eight are under 18 years old.

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5 Week Old Baby Gets Heart Transplant


The parents of one of Britain’s youngest heart transplant survivors spoke yesterday of their gratitude to a German family who donated their dead baby’s heart.Andrew McAskie, now 11 months old, had a heart attack at birth and was close to death when a family whose one-year-old baby had died made their offer. The heart was flown from Germany to the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle upon Tyne and, five weeks after he was born, Andrew underwent a transplant.

The Freeman Hospital performed Britain’s first successful baby heart transplant more than 20 years ago on Kaylee Davidson, who was 5 months old. She is now a healthy young woman. Since then nine babies younger than Andrew have had heart transplants in Britain, including one in 1989 who was 5 days old. Of those still alive, Andrew is the second-youngest.

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Amazing Baby Lives 120 Days With Artificial Heart

Every time I find an amazing baby story I think that it can’t be topped, somehow another amazing baby comes along and shows us that they have what it takes to survive through ANYTHING! Jack Vellam, 13 months old, left hospital today after undergoing a life-saving treatment in which he was kept alive by an artificial heart for 120 days.

He became the youngest patient to be connected to such a device for such a length of time as he recovered from myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle.

The boy, from Pitsford, Northamptonshire, was listed for a heart transplant after suffering a heart attack in March that left him so ill his mother initially agreed that his life support machine should be switched off.

After being transferred to the Freeman hospital, in Newcastle, Jack was placed on an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) machine, which acts as a temporary heart and lungs for those awaiting transplant.But doctors decided to see if Jack could pull through without a transplant because around one in three children recover on their own. He was put on a device known as a Berlin heart – an external artificial heart, connected to his chest by four tubes, which pumps blood around the body.

The device stayed on for 120 days before it was removed in a complex operation 15 days ago. The longest period a Berlin heart has been used at the hospital is 150 days, but the patient in that case eventually had a heart transplant.

The consultant paediatric cardiologist Richard Kirk said: “He [Jack] would have died without the Berlin heart. You can realistically live on the ECMO life support machine he was using for four weeks – that would not have been enough time for a transplant or for him to recover from the myocarditis.

“What is unique about Jack is that he is the youngest patient ever to have this myocarditis and be kept alive on a Berlin heart for so long.”

I can’t imagine what these parents went through for the 4 months their child was being kept alive by a device that was outside of his body. SOURCE

Baby Zoe Get’s Heart Transplant

Baby Zoe was placed at the top of the European heart transplant list after suffering six heart attacks and now she has a doner.

Zoe Chambers, 18 months, from Hull, had a heart transplant at Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital earlier yesterday.

A hospital spokeswoman said the transplant had gone quite well and Zoe was in a stable condition.

“We thank the donor family for thinking about another child during their sad time,” she added.

The hospital said it would not be releasing details of the donor family.

Doctors said that Zoe, who was born with a heart valve which was too narrow, had only weeks to live unless she had a transplant.

A heart became available last week but it was decided it was too large.

Her situation was so desperate, she was put at the top of a European waiting list for a donor last weekend.

Paediatric intensive care consultant at Newcastle Freeman hospital Yam Thiru said at the time: “We are becoming more and more desperate for an organ to become available for her.”

Before the operation, her 33-year-old mother said: “She is desperate. She keeps getting infection after infection.

“She needs a transplant as soon as possible to give her the best chance.”

It was unclear where the donor heart came from, but before the transplant hospital officials said Zoe’s case was so serious that if a suitable organ was found anywhere in Europe it would be flown to Newcastle by private jet.

Zoe has been kept alive by an artificial heart and needed a transplant as soon as possible or she would have died.

Her age and size made the task of finding a suitable donor organ extremely difficult.

 

Her parents, knew their daughter’s only hope was for another child to die and bring heartbreak to another family.

Hearts from donors up to five years old were being considered suitable for transplant surgery as long as they were a good enough tissue match.

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Mismatched Hearts Save Babies’ Lives


Due to the fact that infant hearts are so rare, doctors have gotten creative with the way that they approach the organ transplant.

Connor Geddes was 13 days old when surgeons gave him a new heart that didn’t match his blood type — deliberately.

Connor, now 11 months old and thriving, is one of several dozen babies around the world to have received mismatched hearts, part of a slowly growing movement to increase these tiniest patients’ survival by taking advantage of a lag in their immune systems.

Now the nation’s transplant network is expanding that effort, saying youngsters may be candidates for an incompatible heart up to age 2.

It’s the first step in a new push by the United Network for Organ Sharing to decrease the number of children who die awaiting an organ transplant, a toll particularly high for infants and toddlers.

A babies’ immune systems must learn to recognize and attack an organ of a different blood type, a process that’s turning out to be more gradual than scientists long thought.

Transplant a heart before the baby starts making antibodies that will attack a mismatched organ, and he or she survives as well as babies given matching hearts, says Dr. Lori West, the Canadian surgeon who pioneered incompatible transplants in Toronto in the late 1990s.

But given the scarcity of tiny hearts, the mismatch option was good news. In 2005, the last count available, 45 children under age 2 died while awaiting a new heart. As of last month, 74 youngsters under 2 were on the waiting list.

About one in 5,000 children are born with a heart defect so bad that they’ll need a transplant in the first year or two of life. Yet few babies die of conditions that allow their hearts to be donated.

Those babies still need immune-suppressing drugs for life — blood type is just one form of organ rejection.

Until recently some transplant centers were reluctant to perform mismatch heart surgeries. There was a concern whether children really fare well years after getting a mismatched heart, or if rejection just sets in later.

Now that Dr. West has patients that have survived a decade with the transplant, the worry is starting to fade.

Knowing that the procedure cannot be performed on adults, no one knows what the cutoff age is.

Babies begin producing antibodies to different blood types between 5 months and 2½ years of age — it varies widely from child to child, says West, now at the University of Alberta’s Stollery Children’s Hospital. Only a few of the 90 or so mismatched heart transplants performed worldwide have occurred past a child’s first birthday, the oldest in a 30-month-old in Britain.

Still, age is just a rough marker for antibody production, West stresses. Blood tests to check antibodies are the real key.

Hence the new U.S. policy, adopted last fall and to go into effect later this year. It expands use of mismatched hearts up to age 2, as long as antibody tests show the toddlers are candidates.

For now, many transplant centers are like Webber’s, trying their first mismatched transplants in babies before working up to toddlers.

Last March, Connor Geddes of Erie, Pa., became Pittsburgh’s first of five such transplants. His heart’s left side was too small to pump. Doctors said Connor wouldn’t live long enough to await a heart that matched his Type A blood, but they had a heart from a Type B donor available.

Eleven months later, Connor shows no sign of rejection and happily totters after his older brothers. His tracheotomy tube — from lungs weakened by heart-pumping machines while he awaited the transplant — is to be removed soon, and the scar on his chest is barely visible.

SOURCE:MSNBC


Mismatched Hearts Save Babies’ Lives


Due to the fact that infant hearts are so rare, doctors have gotten creative with the way that they approach the organ transplant.

Connor Geddes was 13 days old when surgeons gave him a new heart that didn’t match his blood type — deliberately.

Connor, now 11 months old and thriving, is one of several dozen babies around the world to have received mismatched hearts, part of a slowly growing movement to increase these tiniest patients’ survival by taking advantage of a lag in their immune systems.

Now the nation’s transplant network is expanding that effort, saying youngsters may be candidates for an incompatible heart up to age 2.

It’s the first step in a new push by the United Network for Organ Sharing to decrease the number of children who die awaiting an organ transplant, a toll particularly high for infants and toddlers.

A babies’ immune systems must learn to recognize and attack an organ of a different blood type, a process that’s turning out to be more gradual than scientists long thought.

Transplant a heart before the baby starts making antibodies that will attack a mismatched organ, and he or she survives as well as babies given matching hearts, says Dr. Lori West, the Canadian surgeon who pioneered incompatible transplants in Toronto in the late 1990s.

But given the scarcity of tiny hearts, the mismatch option was good news. In 2005, the last count available, 45 children under age 2 died while awaiting a new heart. As of last month, 74 youngsters under 2 were on the waiting list.

About one in 5,000 children are born with a heart defect so bad that they’ll need a transplant in the first year or two of life. Yet few babies die of conditions that allow their hearts to be donated.

Those babies still need immune-suppressing drugs for life — blood type is just one form of organ rejection.

Until recently some transplant centers were reluctant to perform mismatch heart surgeries. There was a concern whether children really fare well years after getting a mismatched heart, or if rejection just sets in later.

Now that Dr. West has patients that have survived a decade with the transplant, the worry is starting to fade.

Knowing that the procedure cannot be performed on adults, no one knows what the cutoff age is.

Babies begin producing antibodies to different blood types between 5 months and 2½ years of age — it varies widely from child to child, says West, now at the University of Alberta’s Stollery Children’s Hospital. Only a few of the 90 or so mismatched heart transplants performed worldwide have occurred past a child’s first birthday, the oldest in a 30-month-old in Britain.

Still, age is just a rough marker for antibody production, West stresses. Blood tests to check antibodies are the real key.

Hence the new U.S. policy, adopted last fall and to go into effect later this year. It expands use of mismatched hearts up to age 2, as long as antibody tests show the toddlers are candidates.

For now, many transplant centers are like Webber’s, trying their first mismatched transplants in babies before working up to toddlers.

Last March, Connor Geddes of Erie, Pa., became Pittsburgh’s first of five such transplants. His heart’s left side was too small to pump. Doctors said Connor wouldn’t live long enough to await a heart that matched his Type A blood, but they had a heart from a Type B donor available.

Eleven months later, Connor shows no sign of rejection and happily totters after his older brothers. His tracheotomy tube — from lungs weakened by heart-pumping machines while he awaited the transplant — is to be removed soon, and the scar on his chest is barely visible.

SOURCE:MSNBC