Mom and baby spared traumatic birth after heart surgery performed inside the womb - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:36 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

Mom and baby spared traumatic birth after heart surgery performed inside the womb

A team of Toronto doctors inserted a balloon into a baby's heart wall while he was still in the womb to save him from potentially devastating complications after birth.

The procedure saved baby Sebastian from potentially severe complications after birth, doctors say

Baby Sebastian has heart surgery inside womb

7 years ago
Duration 2:10
Toronto doctors use in utero heart surgery to save baby from potentially devastating complications

Kristine Barrysays when she heard her newborn baby Sebastian scream, it was "the most amazing sound I've ever heard."

"They always prepped us for a blue baby," she said. "They always said that he was going to be blue and not vocal because of the lack of oxygen."

But when Sebastian arrivedat Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto in May, "there's this little guy all pink and screaming."

It would have been a very different and traumatic birth ifSebastian had not undergone a surgical procedure on his heart, known as a balloon atrial septoplasty,five days earlier while he was still in his mother's womb.

During Barry's prenatal checkups, Sebastianwas diagnosed with a severe congenital heart defect, in which the two main arteries of the heart are reversed. Hiscase was especially complex because the interior walls ofhis heart weresealed shut, so that blood couldn't flow between the chambers to pick up oxygen.

"We had a baby with the two sides of the circulation that were not communicating. There was no opening between the upper chambers and the lower chambers and the vessels were coming off the wrong side," says Dr. Greg Ryan, head of the fetal medicine program at Mount Sinai Hospital.

"So what we had to do was to create a communication to allow the blood to mix."

'The clock ticks'

In most cases, newborn babies with heart defects can be rushed from the neonatal unit at Mount Sinai Hospital to the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) across the street,says Dr. Rajiv Chaturvedi, acardiologist at SickKids.

But the closed walls of Sebastian's heart made it unable to automatically circulate oxygen once he lost access to the oxygen supplied via the placenta. That meant there would be little time to saveSebastian from severe complications after he left his mother's womb.

"The clock ticks [so] that you have a few minutes and you start having brain damage and other organ damage,"says Dr. Edgar Jaeggi, head of the fetal cardiac program at SickKids.

Christopher Havill and Kristine Barry are enjoying a normal life at home with their newborn son, Sebastian, thanks to his heart surgeries one of which was performed while he was still in his mother's womb. (CBC News)

So on May 18, Ryan, Chaturvediand Jaeggi, along withdozens of clinicians from both Mount Sinai Hospital and SickKids performed a risky and remarkable procedure:a balloon atrial septoplastywhile the baby is still in the uterus.

With neonatal and cardiac surgeonson standby in case an emergency cesarean section becamenecessary, the doctors used a needle to insert a balloon throughBarry'suterus and into Sebastian'sheart, making a small hole to open up the heart's interior wall, so oxygenated blood could pass through.

Although the procedure was a success, it wasn't a cure for Sebastian's original heart defect, and he would still require open-heart surgery after birth. But it meant that Barry could deliver him normally, without the trauma of knowing it would be a frantic race against time to whisk herbaby away and supply him with oxygen.

A healthy start

In fact, Sebastian's father, Christopher Havill, had time to cut the umbilical cord and he remembers the team even told them they could take pictures.

Surgeons repeated the same procedure they had done in-utero on Sebastian that day to further ensure the flow of oxygen. A week later, hehad open-heart surgery to fix his reversed arteries.Two months later, he's a normal baby at home in Barrie, Ont.,fussing on his mother's lap as his dad smiles and soothes him.

"He's such a good little cuddle buddy," Havill says.

The doctors have even told the couple that Sebastian's scar from his open heart surgery will eventually fade, and will be barely visible by adulthood.

"These kids can play soccer, play hockey, go to university, have pretty normal lives," Chaturvedisays.

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story mistakenly stated that Dr. Edgar Jaeggi, Dr. Rajiv Chaturvedi and Dr. Greg Ryan performed what was believed to be the world's first in-utero balloon atrial septoplasty. In fact, SickKids surgeons have performed that procedure in-utero before, but this was the first time it was performed on a baby with a congenital heart defect in which the two main arteries of the heart are reversed.
    Jul 26, 2017 11:29 AM ET

With files from Vik Adhopia and Marcy Cuttler