Main Category: Pediatrics News
Article Date: 23 Nov 2006 - 11:00am (PST)
Naseem Hasni was born by cesarean section on October 31st with his heart
outside his chest. Doctors from the Holtz Children's Hospital, Miami,
Florida, USA, carried out corrective surgery on him and say the boy should
be able to lead a nearly-normal life. He is currently in a 'critical but
stable' condition. At birth, he weighed 9 pounds and 2 ounces, and was 21
inches long.
Dr. Eliot Rosenkranz, one of the surgeons who carried out the operation,
said Naseem will have to avoid sports where a blow to the sternum may
happen. But he will be able to take part in most other sports and
activities. "Certainly the goal is as normal a childhood as he can
achieve," said Dr. Rosenkranz.
(The Sternum is also know as The Breastbone)
When Nazeem was born his heart was on his chest, on the outside, pumping
normally. The aorta went from his heart straight into his chest. Doctors
wrapped his heart in Gore-Tex, plus a layer of his own skin, and gradually
moved it inside his body.
Naseem was born with Ectopia Cordis - the heart develops outside the body
and the baby does not have a sternum. The sternum protects us from impacts,
hence he should never play impact sports. When he is a bit older, about six
months, pieces of his ribs will be grafted across his chest to create a
makeshift sternum. About 1 in every 180,000 to 126,000 babies are born with
Ectopia Cordis.
Doctors knew about his condition about a month before he was born after an
ultrasound scan. In September his mother had noticed he seemed to be having
hiccups all the time (probably the beating heart).
http://www.holtzchildrenshospital.org
About the Sternum or Breastbone (Wikipedia)
Written by: Christian Nordqvist
Editor: Medical News Today
DOES THIS REPRESENT DEVOLUTION, THAT IS, NEGATIVE EVOLUTION? AS MODERN
MEDICINE ALLOWS GENETIC DEFECTIVES TO MATURE, REPRODUCE AND THUS PROMULGATE
THEIR DELETERIOUS GENES, DO WE NOT COMMIT CRIMES AGAINST NATURE BY
FACILITATING DEVOLUTION?
Bob - 25 Nov 2006 04:42 GMT
>Main Category: Pediatrics News
>Article Date: 23 Nov 2006 - 11:00am (PST)
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>stable' condition. At birth, he weighed 9 pounds and 2 ounces, and was 21
>inches long.
...
>DOES THIS REPRESENT DEVOLUTION, THAT IS, NEGATIVE EVOLUTION? AS MODERN
>MEDICINE ALLOWS GENETIC DEFECTIVES TO MATURE, REPRODUCE AND THUS PROMULGATE
>THEIR DELETERIOUS GENES, DO WE NOT COMMIT CRIMES AGAINST NATURE BY
>FACILITATING DEVOLUTION?
The first thing you need to determine is whether this is a genetic
defect or a developmental accident. If the latter, then, no, it is not
an example of what you suggest.
bob