Miracle baby Daisie Downie becomes the smallest person to have pioneering open heart surgery op

  • Daisie Downie was born six weeks premature with a rare condition
    that prevented blood from going to her lungs directly from her heart

By
Graham Smith

Last updated at 1:42 PM on 23rd December 2011

A newborn baby has miraculously beaten the odds to make it home for her first Christmas after becoming the smallest person to ever undergo a pioneering open heart surgery procedure.

Daisie Downie needed the life-saving operation after she was born six weeks premature with a rare condition that prevented blood from going to her lungs directly from her heart.

Weighing just 5lbs 2oz, she was far too small for surgeons to operate on so a team of medics began a battle to keep her alive.

Survivor: Daisie Downie underwent a life-saving operation at Southampton General Hospital after she was born six weeks premature with a rare condition that prevented blood from going to her lungs directly from her heart

Survivor: Daisie Downie underwent a life-saving operation at Southampton General Hospital after she was born six weeks premature with a rare condition that prevented blood from going to her lungs directly from her heart

The longer Daisie had a chance to
grow, the better her chance of surviving corrective surgery normally
performed on a six- to nine-month-old.

But at just three weeks old her condition became critical and doctors at Southampton General Hospital could delay no longer.

She
became the smallest baby to have a revolutionary procedure to repair a
hole in her heart and a blocked valve during six hours on the operating
table.

Daisie’s mother Deliah Downie, 34, is overjoyed her miracle baby is doing so well she made it home in time for Christmas.

She
said: ‘Daisie is my own Christmas miracle. She was so tiny and so
critically ill there were times when I feared she would never make it.

‘To have her home for a family Christmas and for her to be doing so well is the only present I could have wished for.’

Mrs
Downie and her husband Kev, 38, from Whiteley, Hampshire, first learned
there was a problem with their baby’s heart when they went for a
20-week scan.

Overjoyed: Daisie's mother Deliah Downie, 34, is looking forward to spending Christmas with her miracle baby

Overjoyed: Daisie’s mother Deliah Downie, 34, is looking forward to spending Christmas with her miracle baby

The
couple, who also have two sons – George, six, and Harrison, three – were
told the baby had a hole in her heart and a narrowing of the arteries.

At 34 weeks, a consultant cardiologist found the artery was not just narrow, but completely blocked.

But he estimated Daisie would be 10lbs by the time she was full-term and big enough for them to operate on.

Two
days later however, Mrs Downie suddenly went into labour and Daisie
arrived six weeks premature on October 29 weighing only a little over
5lbs.

She went from intensive care to a cardiac ward where she was put on medication to keep her alive.

Mrs Downie said: ‘The plan was to keep her stable and give her time to grow as much as possible.’

Medics decided that when she reached 6lbs 6oz, Daisie would have a shunt to open up her artery.

Until she hit that weight, her body would be too tiny to accommodate the smallest tube available.

This
tube would temporarily repair her heart and be left in place until she
was at least six months old and big enough to have further surgery to
completely repair her heart.

But
at three weeks the medication keeping her alive stopped working so
doctors decided they had to operate immediately to save her life,
despite the fact she was still only 5lbs 3oz.

After
six hours in surgery, surgeon Markku Kaarne told Mrs Downie he had
managed to fully repair her heart by fixing her valve and closing the
hole in a single operation.

Mrs
Downie said: ‘I couldn’t believe they had done it. They had been
telling me she was far too small for this surgery but they managed it.

‘Apart from a small scar on her chest, you can’t tell she has been through such major work.’

Dr Kevin Roman, consultant
cardiologist at Southampton General Hospital, said: ‘Daisie had a
pulmonary valve which was blocked and had a large hole between the two
pumping chambers of the heart. There was no way for the blood to get to
the lungs.

‘She is the smallest baby we have ever had for this type of repair in the heart.

‘The vast majority of children who have this operation are six to nine months old and consequently much bigger.

‘Even a baby twice her size would have been very sick in intensive care afterwards.

‘In
a tiny premature baby, things were much more difficult. It was a great
team effort and we’re all delighted she made it home in time for
Christmas.’

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