Baby was born Twice after being removed from womb then returned to her for birth in Texas HD

24.10.2016
When she grows up, Lynlee Boemer should demand to celebrate two birthdays a year. For she is the baby who was born twice. Her proper entry into the world came 12 weeks after she was temporarily taken out of her mother’s womb for a life-saving operation. Doctors discovered a tumour in the tailbone of Margaret Boemer’s unborn baby when the mother-to-be went for a routine ultrasound just 16 weeks into her pregnancy. Her only hope was a medical procedure that required surgeons to open up the womb and take the 1 lb, 3 oz foetus out for 20 minutes for a do-or-die operation - and then put her back and sew up the uterus. Mum Margaret was kept on bedrest and the replaced baby made it through another 12 weeks to nearly 36 weeks - full term - before the little girl, named Lynlee Hope, was born for the second time via C-section. Lynlee weighed 5 lb and 5 oz and, after being whisked away for a check-up, she was moved into the nursery with the other babies. Margaret, from Plano, Texas, had feared the worst after getting the shock ultrasound results. ‘They saw something on the scan, and the doctor came in and told us that there was something seriously wrong with our baby and that she had a sacrococcygeal teratoma,’ she told CNN. ‘And it was very shocking and scary, because we didn’t know what that long word meant or what diagnosis that would bring.’ The teratoma is ‘the most common tumour we see in a newborn,’ said Dr. Darrell Cass, co-director of Texas Children’s Fetal Centre and associate professor of surgery, pediatrics and obstetrics and gynecology at Baylor College Medicine. ‘Even though it’s the most common we see, it’s still pretty rare.’ The cause is unknown, although the tumour occurs in girls four times more often than in boys. The growth is seen in only one out of 30,000-70,000 live births. Sometimes doctors can delay surgery until after the birth, but in LynLee’s case the tumour was competing with the foetus for the body’s blood flow ‘so it becomes a competition,’ said Dr. Cass. ‘And in some instances, the tumour wins and the heart just can’t keep up and the heart goes into failure and the baby dies,’ he added. As the tumour grew bigger, the baby’s health deteriorated until doctors had no choice but to act. One option was to terminate the pregnancy, a decision made all the more difficult by the fact that Margaret had originally been expecting twins but lost one of her babies before the second trimester. Margaret said: ‘LynLee didn’t have much of a chance. At 23 weeks, the tumour was shutting her heart down and causing her to go into cardiac failure, so it was a choice of allowing the tumour to take over her body or giving her a chance at life. ‘It was an easy decision for us: We wanted to give her life.’ By the time surgeons were given the green light, Lynlee was nearly 24 weeks old and the tumour was almost the same size as the baby. The operation took five hours, but Dr. Cass said: ‘The part on the foetus we do very, very quickly.

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