Wednesday 3 July 2013

‘Miraculous Birth’ Shocks Doctors In Kano



‘Miraculous Birth’ Shocks Doctors In Kano
    Doctors at Gwarzo General Hospital in Kano are struggling to come to terms with the successful birth of a baby girl on Wednesday last week, under circumstances they said medical textbooks have labelled “rare and unusual”.


    The strange happening occurred after the baby’s mother, who had never gone for antenatal, first visited the hospital located about 30 minutes drive from Kano city last but one Monday.
    “She noticed progressive swelling of the area, which she said was Daji (cancer),” the Chief Medical

    Director of the hospital, Dr. Charles Onyia, said. “She might have decided to come to the hospital after trying local medication without success,” he hypothesized.

    But the doctor who attended to the woman was sure it was not cancer, but something strange, and he did not waste time to ask her to go for a scan.

    “When I touched the abdomen, I felt the foetal pad occurring outside her uterus,” Dr. Suleman Abdul said.
    As the ultrasound results came, the picture was vivid: the woman, simply called Aisha, was nine months pregnant, carrying live and kicking baby “on the top of her stomach and intestine, not in the womb”.

    For the doctors and other medical staff in the hospital, the discovery was not just startling, it was also novel. They didn’t waste time to wheel her into the theatre room and within 30 minutes, the baby had been delivered alive.

    “When I was a medical student 20 years ago, Professor Orhue of University of Benin Teaching Hospital said this cannot happen,” recalled Dr. Charles.

    “In the professor’s words: ‘It is impossible to have abdominal pregnancies to last to term (that is nine months) [and] even if they do, the baby will not be alive’.”

    During the operation, according to Dr. Onyia, more astonishing discoveries were made. “Surprisingly, we found out that membrane was well circumscribed or defined outside the womb, and secondly, the placenta was found on the intestine and stomach,” he said.

    “I am proud to tell you that all over the world, we have never seen or heard of this kind of surgery where the baby is brought out alive. It is very rare even in textbooks. They hardly progress or get to 9 months gestation. The baby and the mother are lost mostly during the surgery. She is a miracle,” the CMD added.

    The hospital said the baby and the mother were healthy, adding that the newborn had been suckling.
    “Usually, we discharge our CS patients seven days after operation, but this is a striking case. We want to observe her condition for 10 days before we discharge her,” according to Dr. Onyia.

    The mother, Aisha, who was seen cracking jokes with hospital staff inside a female ward, told Daily Trust that she hailed from Tsaure village in Shanono local government area of Kano State and had never attended antenatal until last week Monday.

    For the nine months she was carrying the baby, Aisha had suffered persistent stomach ache. “Now the pains have completely stopped,” she said.
    The woman, who said she had five children, expressed happiness over the development, saying her husband was equally very happy about it and had been frequenting the hospital to see both her and the baby.

    She said they had not come up with a name for the newborn baby yet. Despite that, however, the hospital management is planning to make the naming ceremony coming up today an eventful one.

    “The management of the hospital wishes to call on the state government to assist the family; to give the baby a befitting naming ceremony and to also assist them to take care of the child, because it is a miracle baby,” Dr. Onyia appealed.

    When contacted, a consultant gynecologist at the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital (AKTH) in Kano, Dr. Hauwa Musa Abdullahi, confirmed that abdominal pregnancies are rare, but not impossible.

    She recalled a case where a woman having the problem was operated and the baby was brought out alive. “It is not as if it does not happen; it happens but very rarely. Even last week we had a patient with abdominal pregnancy at AKTH, but the baby did not come out alive,” she said.
    Dr. Hauwa said the condition is caused by a number of factors, including infections and others.

dailytrust.com.ng

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