Bengaluru's green corridor gives life to 2-year-old Russian kid


Chennai, Feb 2 (IANS): A two-year-old baby boy from Russia has got a new lease of life after successfully undergoing a heart transplant in a private hospital here, doctors said Monday.

The transplanted heart, that is beating well now, belonged to a two-year-old boy from Bengaluru who was diagnosed as brain dead.

"The challenge was getting the heart of right size in the case of a child," Suresh Rao K.G., who heads the critical care and cardiac anaesthesia department at Fortis Malar Hospital, told reporters.

The doctors claimed it was India's first paediatric heart transplant operation which lasted for nearly eight hours.

Weighing only seven kg, the boy - Gleb Kudriavtsev from Moscow - was suffering from restrictive cardiomyopathy, a condition where the heart loses its capacity to relax with each beat affecting pumping of blood.

As heart transplant was the only solution, the search was on for a suitable baby heart.

The good news came from Bengaluru where the parents of the two-year-old boy agreed to donate his organs.

In 47 minutes, the harvested heart was transported from Bengaluru to Chennai.

Baby Gleb was diagnosed with restrictive cardiomyopathy when he had just turned one.

From being a healthy baby, his mother Nelli Kudriavtceva witnessed her little one go breathless and suffer from heart failure.

Mobilising monetary support for the treatment, she travelled with her baby to Munich, where German doctors confirmed the diagnosis but refused to treat him due to high lung pressure.

Finding the US to be very costly, Kudriavtceva came to Chennai with her baby boy in November 2014.

The baby was immediately listed on the transplant list at both the state level and the regional level so that he could get a suitable heart at the earliest.

On Dec 18, the team at Fortis Malar received an alert about a suitable heart being available at the Manipal Hospital in Bengaluru.

Immediately, a team of doctors from Fortis Malar went to Bengaluru and evaluated the suitability of the heart.

The heart was harvested, airlifted using a charter flight and brought to Chennai.

The surgery was carried out successfully Dec 19. In view of high lung pressure, the new heart took about 10 days to adjust after which the baby recovered rapidly, doctors said.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Sampath, Mlore/ Blore

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    After IT field now India is making a name in Medical field...

    Need lot more development in other fields too then we all can proudly say

    MERA BHARAT MAHAN

    DisAgree Agree [13] Reply Report Abuse

  • Prasheesh Kumar, Mumbai

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    A Doctor friend of mine says that the heart taken out of the body of brain-dead child has to be replanted within 4-5 hours or else the transplantations become unsuccessful, whereas the sick Russian child can be kept alive for many days with life saving supports and also could be transported long distance under medical supervision safely. So, bringing Russian child to Bangalore would have been more easier and prudent.

    DisAgree [3] Agree [13] Reply Report Abuse

  • G Z T Kunte, Udupi

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    Why it is always from Bengaluru to Chennai ? Why no hearts from Chennai to Bengaluru ?
    Why the Russian child at Chennai was not shifted to Bengaluru and transplant is performed in Bengaluru Hospital itself instead of making so much Road show between Bengaluru and Chennai ?
    Publicity gimmick by rich private hospitals to attract more attention of the people without much advertisement cost !?

    DisAgree [26] Agree [34] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ralf Kudroli, Mangalore

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    Kunte, just be glad that the baby is fine. Why you creating divides between states? Be proud that that mother got relief in India after visiting many other countries. Doesn't matter Bengaluru or Chennai. Are you a doctor to ask why the baby wasn't shifted? Its common sense that that transporting an organ is less complicated than transporting the patient in critical condition?

    DisAgree [7] Agree [47] Reply Report Abuse

  • Af,, Mangaluru

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    G Z T Kunte, Udupi,
    thank god that the baby if recovering and successfully transplant the heart ,it is a complicated matter, where German doctors also not taken the case and our Indian doctors who took the risk here. be proud about that.
    one quest. if at all your child was there you would have asked this question to doctors?

    DisAgree [8] Agree [20] Reply Report Abuse

  • dam, mangalore

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    Dear Kunte...
    Here India is more important than Bengaluru , Chennai , Mangalore, or Mumbai...

    DisAgree [6] Agree [24] Reply Report Abuse

  • yogesh, bombay

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    Only 2 or 3 hearts going from bangalore to chennai and lakhs of slum-dwellers coming in droves from chennai to bangalore

    DisAgree [6] Agree [10] Reply Report Abuse

  • Amar Nathal, Mangalore

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    India is getting famous for medical Marvels. Congratulations to Doctors and the team. God bless all those involved to save life of the child.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [47] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rita, Germany

    Tue, Feb 03 2015

    Thank God Baby a heart and recovering.Looking at that angel,our heart stops to beat onebeat.wish him all the best and the parents too.congratulations to our Indian Team.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [44] Reply Report Abuse


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