A brain dead donor gives a fresh lease of life to a 7-year-old kid!

- Advertisement -

New Delhi, India (CU)_ A seven-year-old kid who was diagnosed with sclerosing cholangitis, a rare condition that affects two out of 1 million children, went through a liver transplantation surgery in a Delhi hospital. According to the Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals, the youngster received a portion of his liver from a 40-year-old brain-dead donor.

According to a formal statement released by Anupam Sibal, Group Medical Director and Senior Pediatric Gastroenterologist and Hepatologist at Apollo Hospitals Group, the youngster had been diagnosed with sclerosing cholangitis, which is a rare condition that affects 0.2 out of 1,000 children.

orissapost.com

Anupam Sibal explained the rare medical condition. He said, “In sclerosing cholangitis, inflammation and fibrosis (scarring) develops in bile ducts within the liver and outside the liver. These scars make the ducts narrow, jaundice and itching develops and over a period to time cirrhosis and liver failure develops. The cause of this disease is unknown. Liver transplant is the only treatment option when end stage liver failure is established”.

According to Neerav Goyal, senior consultant for liver transplant at Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals, “The child’s condition had been deteriorating progressively. An immediate transplant was needed to save his life. A team of surgeons went to Jaipur, harvested the organ and brought it to Delhi to be transplanted into the child”. Goyal stated that the organ extraction took nearly four hours due to the need to break the liver in order to fix it for a young child. He said, “On the way back, they could make it from Jaipur to Delhi in three-and-a-half-hours due to the green corridor created. We started the transplant around 11.30 pm here and ended around 8 am on Thursday

Hot this week

Fit for a Queen: Inside the V&A’s Lavish Marie Antoinette Exhibition

The Victoria & Albert Museum’s new exhibition, Marie Antoinette...

Back in the Buyer’s Market? Australia’s housing sees a sharp uptick

Australia's property market is experiencing a significant surge, not...

NZ’s Fastest Bird Just Won — But Faces Extinction

The annual New Zealand Bird of the Year competition...

The Cozy Comfort That Comes at a Cost: Wood Fires Linked to Respiratory Decline

Healthcare (Commonwealth Union) – Using a wood or coal-burning...
- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -sitaramatravels.comsitaramatravels.com

Popular Categories

Commonwealth Union
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.