SUM SURGEONS EXCISE LARGE TUMOUR FROM BABY’S CHEST CAVITY

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Bhubaneswar: Surgeons at the Institute of Medical Sciences and SUM Hospital here successfully excised a large tumour weighing about 500 grams from the chest of a 21-month-old baby last week.
The baby boy, weighing 8.5 kg, had been losing weight and feeling tired on simple excertion for the past 7 to 8 months while his oxygen saturation level dipped causing concern in the child’s family.
“When we received the baby in our hospital, his oxygen saturation level had fallen below 90 per cent and he had difficulty in breathing,” Prof. Antaryami Pradhan, Pediatric Surgeon who was part of the medical team, said.
Thorough evaluation of the baby revealed that he had a large 11cm tumour attached to the heart and its major vessels in the chest which is very huge for the child while it completely compressed the left lung, he said.
The hospital constituted a team of doctors drawn from different specialties for evaluation and management of the patient which was guided by radiologists
Prof. Satya S. Mohapatra and Prof. Adya K. Panda. Prof. Pradhan, who was part of the team which conducted the surgery led by Prof. Debasish Sahu, CTVS Surgeon, said it was done by opening up the chest cavity by the clamshell Thoracotomy method since the tumour was large. “We could do complete excision of the tumour after separating it from the heart and lung and there was almost no blood loss during the whole procedure,” he said.
The baby was kept in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) under mechanical ventilation for two days under the supervision of Prof. Debasmita Rath and Dr. Basudev Biswal.
During the surgery, the anesthesia procedure was undertaken by a team comprising Prof. Soumyaa Samal, Prof. Sulochana Dash, Dr. Nupur Moda, Dr. Madhusmita Patra, Dr. Sudeep Mohapatra and Dr. Ramya.
Ms. Sasmita Sahoo, Ms. Pranati Parida, Mr. Radhe (all pharmacists), Mr. Biswaranjan Parida, Ms. Puspalata Sahu, Mr. Bijay, Ms. Smrutirekha, Ms. Rojalin, Mr. Tapan and Mr. Bibek Maharana (nurses and OT Assistants) were part of the team which assisted in the surgery and treatment of the baby.

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