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Fetal Therapy: Life-saving Breakthrough
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14631 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1988 |
2,034 Words |
| Author
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Alexandra Greeley Alexandra Greeley was food editor of the South China Morning
Post, Hong Kong, and staff writer for the Time-Life cooking
series "Great Meals in Minutes." |
In 1981, Michael Skinner was recorded in medical history before he had a name or uttered his first cry. While still in the womb, two weeks before birth, he underwent surgery to open his obstructed urinary tract. Without that surgery, little Michael would have suffered irreparable kidney damage and possibly death.
Michael's abnormality was detected when pediatric surgeon Dr. Michael Harrison and perinatologist/geneticist Dr. Mitchell Golbus, both of the Fetal Treatment Program, University of California, San Francisco, scanned the mother with ultrasound--a diagnostic tool that bounces sound waves off the fetus to obtain a detailed picture of life inside the womb. The doctors saw that she was carrying twins, but that one infant was suffering from hydronephrosis, or blockage of the urinary tract. When such a blockage is total, it causes fluid backup damaging both the kidneys and lungs. Although it is difficult to evaluate the number of babies that may have the condition (so many die before birth), an estimate is one out of every two thousand.
The doctors knew they had to act fast or risk losing the baby. With the parents' informed consent, the doctors inserted a needle through the mother's womb and into the bladder of her unborn son to drain off the fluid. Next, they inserted a catheter (a slender spaghetti-like tube) and a shunt into the unborn's bladder to assure continued fluid drainage until birth.
Two weeks later, the twins were born. Healthy baby Mary weighed about five pounds and went right to the nursery. Michael was basically fine too, except for some minor problems, like ballooning abdominal walls from fluid pressure. The doctors
... (1998 of 12989 Characters)
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