Evenings News.com
Community News and Information
Submit a Story
Search

News Categories  
 
 Auto and Truck
 
 Babies
 
 Back To School
 
 Beauty
 
 Books and Magazines
 
 Bridal Articles and News
 
 Business News
 
 Charity
 
 Children
 
 Cleaning
 
 Community News
 
 Computers and The Internet
 
 Consumer News
 
 Decorating
 
 Education
 
 Employment
 
 Entertainment
 
 Environment
 
 Family
 
 Fashion News
 
 Food and Entertaining
 
 Gadgets and Gizmos
 
 Green Living
 
 Gift Ideas
 
 Health
 
 Healthy Living
 
 Holidays
 
 Home
 
 Home Improvements
 
 Household Hints
 
 How To
 
 Human Interest
 
 Insurance
 
 Lawns and Gardens
 
 Mind, Body and Soul
 
 Outdoor Living and Recreation
 
 Paranormal and Metaphysical
 
 Parenting
 
 Pets
 
 Real Estate
 
 Relationships
 
 Science and Technology
 
 Senior Living
 
 Technology
 
 Teenagers
 
 Toys and Hobbies
 
 Vacations, Travel and Leisure
 
 Weight Loss
 
 Women
 
 Artículos de las Noticias en Español

Health Last Updated: Jul 2nd, 2008 - 21:15:22


Hospital Specializes in Heart Transplants for the Tiniest Patients
By
Mar 26, 2006, 21:04

RSS Feed
Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Article Translations: English German Spanish French Italian Portuguese Japanese Korean Chinese
(ARA) –After nine months of pregnancy, an adorable bundle of love becomes part of your life. Bringing your baby home from the hospital is a special day, as you look forward to watching this perfect little human being grow and learn. Imagine discovering a week or a month later that your child has developed a serious health problem and will need surgery. Whom do you trust with that tiny little body?

Heather Voss knows that feeling all too well. Her daughter Skylie was a happy, healthy baby – or so they thought -- right up until they learned she needed a heart transplant. “When she was a month and a half old, she went off to daycare in the morning, and within two hours she was in the local emergency room,” says Heather.

Skylie was diagnosed with cardiomyopothy. “One side of her heart was extremely enlarged and not pumping blood,” explains Heather. After trying unsuccessfully to treat the condition with medication, doctors told Heather that Skylie needed a heart transplant.

Luckily for Skylie, her family lives in Minnesota, so she was transferred to the University of Minnesota Children’s Hospital, Fairview, one of the nation’s premier facilities for pediatric heart transplants. Founded in 1981, the transplant center’s pediatric organ transplantation program is the only one in the state that regularly serves infants.

The team of experts at University of Minnesota Children’s Hospital specializes in stabilizing children pre-transplant, performing heart transplantations and providing follow up medical care. Physicians at the hospital performed the first infant heart transplant in Minnesota on a six-month-old and have since performed a heart transplant on a one-month-old child.

Skylie was three months old when she had her heart transplant. She spent two months in the hospital following her surgery. She is now 10 months old, and “doing really well,” says her mom. Although Skylie suffered one bout of rejection, she has since been able to decrease the amount of anti-rejection medication. “We’re down to a check up every six weeks,” reports Heather.

Dr. Cynthia Herrington, a cardiovascular and thoracic transplant surgeon who was part of Skylie’s medical team, explains that there are many different reasons that a child might need a heart transplant, such as congenital heart disease, a heart defect, or as in Skylie’s case, cardiomyopathy. “Heart transplants are the best hope for pediatric patients with serious heart disease,” she says. “While there are a wide variety of support devices for adults, there aren’t many options for children.”

About 300 pediatric heart transplants are performed in the United States every year. Once a child is placed on the list for a heart transplant, it can be a matter of days or months before a heart is available. Skylie waited for three weeks before a match was found.

Many children are hospitalized during that time, as was the case with Skylie. “It was really hard to see her heart deteriorate before she got her transplant,” says Heather. “She was on a ventilator and her heart function was down to 5 percent.”

While it was a very stressful time, Heather praises the doctors and nurses who were with Skylie along the way. Heather looks forward to seeing the staff when she and Skylie go back for checkups.

“We have a long history of research devoted to improving results for pediatric patients. We are proud of our reputation for innovation and advanced technology in performing heart transplants for infants and children,” says Herrington.

For more information on Skylie or University of Minnesota Children’s Hospital, visit www.uofmchildrenshospital.org/newheart.
Courtesy of ARA Content

© Copyright by Eveningsnews.com

Top of Page

Health
Latest Headlines
Digestive Health And Children
Treat Morning Sickness Naturally
Mouths: The Front Line Against Heart Disease
Sex After Menopause
Cancer and Nutrition: What You Need to Know
Help For Families With Autism
Stop Diabetes...Know Your Rise
Senior Sickness Snowball Effect
Top 5 Spring Allergy Mistakes
Allergy Season: How To Get Relief
Stop Colon Cancer Now: Screening Equals Prevention
Get Rid Of Morning Sickness And Into Pregnancy Fitness
Getting The Most From Your Health Care Benefits
Take Care of Your Ticker
Men Can Now Benefit From A Once-Yearly Osteoporosis Medication
COPD: Learn More About It
Dealing With Pain And Depression
Kidney Disease...Why Waiting Hurts.
March 12 is World Kidney Day
Tips For Teens With Psoriasis