In a significant medical achievement, a healthy baby girl was born to a Colombian couple after doctors repaired her spinal defect two months ago while she was still in her mother’s womb.
The pioneering surgery to address open Spina Bifida repair in utero, which was carried out by a team of skilled surgeons at Burjeel Medical City, marked an important milestone in the field of fetal medicine in the UAE. According to doctors, both baby Maryam Violeta and her mother, Liz Valentina Parra Rodriguez, are in good health and have been discharged from the hospital.
Open Spina Bifida is a birth defect that happens when the bones of the spine do not form, and this leads to the spinal cord being left exposed to amniotic fluid. The condition can lead to serious neurological complications and physical disabilities. The average worldwide incidence of Spina Bifida is one per 1,000 births.
After the procedure was carried out in June, the medical team led by Dr. Mandeep Singh, Consultant, Fetal Medicine and Obstetrics, Director of Kypros Nicolaides Fetal Medicine & Therapy Center at Burjeel Medical City, closely monitored the progress of both the baby and the mother during the two months following the surgery.
During the fetal repair surgery, the doctors made a small incision on the uterus and the back of the baby was exposed to allow the neurosurgeon to close the spina bifida defect. The doctors used a synthetic patch to cover the defect and the amniotic fluid was then instilled back into the cavity and the uterus was closed back up and the baby remained in the womb for the remainder of the pregnancy.
Baby Maryam was delivered by Dr. Ritu Nambiar, Consultant, Obstetrician & Gynecologist, after Liz went into spontaneous labor at 35 +4 weeks. The baby, who weighed 2.46kg at birth, had a small gap in the skin over the back, which was closed by Dr. Essam Elgamal, Consultant Neurosurgeon. The baby was under the care of a neonatal medical team led by Dr. Iviano Rudolph Ossuetta, Consultant & Director of Neonatology.
Although it is too early to comment about the extent of recovery, the medical team is cautiously optimistic about her future. According to them, the urinary bladder is functioning well and both legs have normal tone and movements.
“The spina bifida repair was intact and hence the in-utero procedure is deemed successful. Baby Maryam is displaying positive signs of recovery. Although it’s still early to predict the full extent of her recovery, the initial indicators are promising. Ultrasound and MRI of brain are normal and hence there is no indication for performing VP shunt, which is a very distinct advantage of performing the repair in utero. VP shunt is often used to manage excess cerebrospinal fluid buildup in the brain, which can be a common complication in Spina Bifida cases,” said Dr. Mandeep.
“We are already in touch with a team of doctors at our partner organisation Colsanitas Clinic, Colombia, and will hand over care of baby Maryam once she returns home to Bogota, Colombia. She will need to undergo follow-ups with a pediatric urologist, pediatric neurologist, and physiotherapist,” the doctor added.
Liz and her husband Jason Mateo Moreno Gutierrez are getting ready to return to their home country of Colombia in two weeks along with baby Maryam.