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September
15, 2006 |
Family
has healthy baby boy with help from ECMO
When Fatuma and Abiy Roba of Ethiopia welcomed their son, Fraul, into
the world in September 2005, they were excited at the birth of their first
child. A three-time winner of the Boston Marathon and the gold medalist
in the women's marathon at the 1996 Summer Olympics, Fatuma and her husband
looked forward to starting a new chapter in their lives as a family. Although
Fraul appeared healthy at first, within minutes of his birth it was clear
that something was seriously wrong.
Doctors diagnosed Fraul with pulmonary hypertension of a newborn, a condition
that causes babies to experience problems with breathing and lung function
soon after birth. Before a baby is born, oxygen is circulated throughout
the body without using the lungs. Instead, the placenta supplies the baby
with oxygen through the umbilical cord, and the pulmonary artery sends
blood back into the heart. However, when a newborn has pulmonary hypertension,
the bloodflow continues to bypass the lungs as it did before birth, leading
to extreme oxygen deprivation. Without proper treatment, the condition
often is fatal. Above, Masiakos with
the Roba family
It was a coincidence that the Robas had chosen the MGH for their son's
birth, but it also was a decision that saved Fraul's life. The MGH is
one of only two hospitals in the Northeast that offers the therapy Fraul
needed — extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). This technology,
which was reintroduced at the MGH by Daniel Ryan, MD, of MGH Pediatric
Surgical Services, uses an artificial lung to give the baby oxygen so
that the body has time to repair the original problem — which can
include an infection or a hernia — that caused the pulmonary hypertension.
Newborns needing ECMO often are so fragile that they die while being transported
to ECMO facilities from other hospitals, so Fraul was especially fortunate
to be born at the MGH where doctors and nurses could give him the treatment
he so desperately needed. Under the care of Peter Masiakos, MD, also of
Pediatric Surgical Services, Fraul was brought to the Neonatal Intensive
Care Unit (NICU), where he received ECMO therapy for seven days. After
one month, he was healthy enough to head home to Ethiopia with his parents.
The Robas are extremely grateful for the excellent care Fraul received
while at the MGH. "Dr. Masiakos is like a family member to us,"
says Abiy. "Not only him, but all the nurses there in the NICU. We
have framed pictures of all of them in our home."
This summer, the Roba family made a return visit to the MGH so doctors
could check Fraul's progress. "Looking at Fraul now, you wouldn't
guess that he was as sick as he was," says Masiakos. "He is
meeting all of his developmental milestones and is keeping his parents
very busy. His recovery was only possible through the exhaustive work
of the NICU nurses, respiratory therapists and his neonatologist."
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