Infant saved after mother’s cardiac arrest

Doctors from two Hanoi-based hospitals have successfully saved the life of an infant born to a mother suffering a sudden cardiac arrest in surgery that was calculated by the second.

Associate Professor Ta Manh Cuong, Deputy Head of the National Heart Institute, told the media on August 16 that the surgery - the first ever of its kind at the National Heart Institute, took place a week ago with cooperation between doctors from the institute and Bach Mai Hospital’s obstetrics and paediatric departments.

Dr Cuong said the mother was 25-year-old Nguyen Thi Thiep from Cao Bang Province. She was 32-weeks pregnant and suffered from serious congenital heart defects.

She was earlier admitted to Bac Giang Province’s Luc Ngan General Hospital and transferred to the National Heart Institute on August 8 with serious pneumonia where she could hardly breathe.

Her situation became quickly worse just hours after being hospitalised with respiratory failure and sudden cardiac arrest.

Doctors from the two hospitals were mobilised to carry out the operation to save the baby’s life right in the emergency room as they did not have enough time to move the patient to surgery, Dr Cuong said.

“The infant was taken out of the mother’s uterus in less than a minute but also suffered from cardiac arrest. The heart was able to function again after being treated. If we were a few more seconds late, we would have lost the baby,” he said, adding that unfortunately they were unable to save Thiep’s life.

The baby’s condition has improved after one week being treated at Bach Mai Hospital’s Paediatric Department, he said.

According to Thiep’s family, she was diagnosed in 2007 with congenital heart defects, which doctors at the Hanoi-based Viet Duc Hospital said could not be cured. She was then married and became pregnant without her doctors’ consultation due to a strong desire to have children.

Mời quý độc giả theo dõi VOV.VN trên
Viết bình luận

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Related

Hospital infection control lacking in Vietnam
Hospital infection control lacking in Vietnam

Hospital infection control and prevention is a major challenge facing Vietnam’s health sector despite its important role in providing successful treatment to patients, as many hospitals and health clinics do not pay enough attention to it, participants at a conference said last week.

Hospital infection control lacking in Vietnam

Hospital infection control lacking in Vietnam

Hospital infection control and prevention is a major challenge facing Vietnam’s health sector despite its important role in providing successful treatment to patients, as many hospitals and health clinics do not pay enough attention to it, participants at a conference said last week.

FV Hospital offers services to cancer patients
FV Hospital offers services to cancer patients

Ho Chi Minh City-based FV Hospital is offering check-ups and treatment to nearly 900 cancer patients who hold national health insurance cards in order to ease the burden on the public hospital system.

FV Hospital offers services to cancer patients

FV Hospital offers services to cancer patients

Ho Chi Minh City-based FV Hospital is offering check-ups and treatment to nearly 900 cancer patients who hold national health insurance cards in order to ease the burden on the public hospital system.