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Complex Heart Surgery at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Saves Life of Tiny Preemie; Infant Originally Given Zero Chance of Survival Now Has Normal Life Expectancy.


STANFORD, Calif. -- Jerrick De Leon's heart may be only the size of a small grape, but in the field of cardiac surgery it's one of the most important in the world. On Feb. 6, 1-week-old Jerrick became what surgeons at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Lucile Packard Children's Hospital (LPCH) is a hospital located on the Stanford University campus in Palo Alto, California. It is staffed by over 650 physicians and 4,750 staff and volunteers.  at Stanford believe is the smallest baby ever to survive a type of open-heart surgery called an arterial switch procedure. Jerrick was born more than 13 weeks early and weighed only 700 grams, or slightly more than 1.5 pounds, at the time of his surgery.

The successful operation marked a dramatic turnaround for Jerrick, who was airlifted to the hospital after doctors in Southern California gave him a zero chance of survival. Barring unrelated complications from his prematurity, Jerrick is now expected to have a normal lifespan.

Jerrick's surgery was performed by pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.

pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics.
 cardiac surgeon V. Mohan Reddy Vadiyala Mohan Reddy is an Indian professor at Stanford's Medical School in USA.

A graduate from Kakatiya medical college in Warangal, India with a masters from the Institute of Medicine in New Delhi, he is the chief of pediatric cardiac surgery and specializes in paediatric
, MD. Reddy specializes in correcting heart defects in extremely low birth-weight babies. In 2001, Reddy successfully performed a different cardiac repair on a newborn Serena Brown, who weighed only 640 grams at the time of her surgery. At the time she was believed to be the smallest child ever to undergo open-heart surgery.

"Babies this premature are very small and very fragile, with extremely delicate tissue," said Reddy. "It's necessary to scale down your hand and arm movements to achieve a very fine degree of accuracy."

Reddy, who is chief of pediatric cardiac surgery at LPCH LPCH Lucile Packard Children's Hospital  and an associate professor of cardiothoracic surgery and of pediatrics at Stanford's School of Medicine, added, "Everyone involved in the operation is extremely cautious and the procedure goes very slowly. What would normally take three hours often takes four to five in a baby this small."

Reddy also performed the operation without stopping Jerrick's circulation -- allowing blood to continue to bathe his fragile brain during the procedure but substantially increasing the technical difficulty.

"Jerrick is doing far better than expected," said his mother, pediatrician Maria Lourdes, "especially since he was originally given no chance of survival. This miraculous surgery has corrected his heart problem. Now I'm just looking at a premature baby. I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 how to express how thankful I am." Although Lourdes is a physician she was not directly involved in her son's care.

Jerrick's premature birth premature birth

Birth less than 37 weeks after conception. Infants born as early as 23–24 weeks may survive but many face lifelong disabilities (e.g., cerebral palsy, blindness, deafness).
 at 26.5 weeks gestation was necessitated by his mother's severe pre-eclampsia, a dangerous spike in a pregnant woman's blood pressure that can be fatal to both mother and baby. After his birth in a Southern California hospital by cesarean section cesarean section (sĭzâr`ēən), delivery of an infant by surgical removal from the uterus through an abdominal incision. The operation is of ancient origin: indeed, the name derives from the legend that Julius Caesar was born in this , Jerrick's doctors noticed the carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure.  concentration in his blood was higher than normal. An echocardiogram ech·o·car·di·o·gram
n.
A visual record produced by echocardiography.


Echocardiogram
A non-invasive ultrasound test that shows an image of the inside of the heart.
 pinpointed the reason.

The heart normally pumps blood throughout the body in a kind of figure-eight pattern, with the heart in the center: blood circulates first to the lungs and routes back through the heart for an extra push before traveling through the rest of the body, and then returning again to the heart before heading back to the lungs.

In Jerrick's case, the two arteries routing blood out of the heart were switched during development, severing the connection between the two loops of the figure eight. Oxygenated blood Oxygenated blood
Blood carrying oxygen through the body.

Mentioned in: Patent Ductus Arteriosus
 cycled uselessly between the heart and the lungs while the body received only oxygen-poor blood. A naturally occurring connection between these two arteries was the fragile link keeping Jerrick alive, but it normally closes shortly after birth in full-term babies.

Jerrick's condition, known as transposition of the great arteries Transposition of the Great Arteries Definition

Transposition of the great arteries is a birth defect causing a fatal condition in which there is a reversal, or switch, in the truncal connections of the two main (great) blood vessels to the heart, the
, occurs in about 40 of every 100,000 live births. Prenatal diagnosis Prenatal diagnosis
The determination of whether a fetus possesses a disease or disorder while it is still in the womb.

Mentioned in: Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome

prenatal diagnosis 
 via a specialized ultrasound is technically possible, but rare. Surgery is always required to correct the defect, usually within the first two weeks of life. However, it was believed that Jerrick was too small and premature to undergo the difficult fix, which involves switching the arteries back to their correct positions.

Waiting for Jerrick to grow wasn't an option; doctors considered it unlikely that he would live long enough to gain the needed weight and strength. But after delivering the grim news to the baby's parents, the surgeon in Southern California did more research and discovered that Reddy had success treating extremely tiny infants.

Jerrick was airlifted to Lucile Packard Children's Hospital on Feb. 4, two days before his surgery. The procedure went well enough that Jerrick was recently moved from the hospital's specialized cardiac care unit to the neonatal intensive care unit Noun 1. neonatal intensive care unit - an intensive care unit designed with special equipment to care for premature or seriously ill newborn
NICU

ICU, intensive care unit - a hospital unit staffed and equipped to provide intensive care
, where he can recuperate re·cu·per·ate
v.
To return to health or strength; recover.
 and gain weight with other tiny preemies.

"A lot of pediatric cardiologists and neonatologists think these kids are inoperable inoperable /in·op·er·a·ble/ (in-op´er-ah-b'l) not susceptible to treatment by surgery.

in·op·er·a·ble
adj.
Unsuitable for a surgical procedure.
, but I believe that is a myth," said Reddy. "We have the most experience in the world operating on these extremely low birth-weight babies. This experience, coupled with our ongoing research on fetal surgery, gives us an edge when treating children like Jerrick."

Lourdes' view of the situation is colored both by being a pediatrician and a mother. "I know all the risks of having a premature baby; I've taken care of smaller infants during my residency training," she said. "But when the pediatrician was telling me about Jerrick's heart defect, it just wrecked me emotionally. I couldn't feel anything. Now, as a mom, I feel that my baby is going to be OK."

MEDIA ADVISORY: The mother of patient Jerrick De Leon along with Jerrick's surgeon, V. Mohan Reddy, MD, will meet the media from 12n-1pm Thursday, February 17, at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, 725 Welch Rd., Palo Alto, CA. Photos and video of Jerrick will be provided.

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford is a 264-bed hospital devoted to the care of children and expectant mothers. Providing pediatric and obstetric medical and surgical services and associated with Stanford School of Medicine, LPCH offers patients locally, regionally and nationally the full range of health-care programs and services -- from preventive and routine care to the diagnosis and treatment of serious illness and injury. To learn more about Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, please visit our Web site at http://www.lpch.org.
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