CORONAVIRUS almost killed a newborn boy — by mirroring the exact symptoms of a life-threatening heart defect.
Mum Sadie Lovell, 35, spent days fearing Thomas could become the UK’s youngest victim of the killer virus.
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His vital signs crashed and he was resuscitated 13 times despite being put on a ventilator and anti-viral drugs.
But as hopes faded a specialist at Great Ormond Street hospital made a breakthrough.
Sadie told The Sun: “The cardiologist told us the coronavirus had been playing a cruel trick on us all along.
“Thomas had Covid but it wasn’t killing him — a congenital heart defect producing exactly the same symptoms was doing the real damage.”
Writing for The Times, Sadie’s sister Fiona Hamilton explains that doctors had initially tried to remove all the fluid from the baby’s lungs which was causing difficulty breathing, but there was no sign of him getting any better.
To make matters worse, Sadie was facing the ordeal alone as her husband, Steven, was not allowed into the hospital because of the pandemic and was forced to watch everything unfold via Facetime.
What is TAPVR?
According to the CDC:
Total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR) is a birth defect of the heart. In a baby with TAPVR, oxygen-rich blood does not return from the lungs to the left atrium. Instead, the oxygen-rich blood returns to the right side of the heart. Here, oxygen-rich blood mixes with oxygen-poor blood. This causes the baby to get less oxygen than is needed to the body.
Doctors would consistently tell me that ‘your baby is very, very, very sick’. I later realised this was code for ‘there is a distinct possibility that your baby will die’.
Sadie, distraught, spent that time in an isolated Covid-19 ward where Thomas was hooked up to machines monitoring his oxygen, heart rate and blood pressure.
Fiona explains that on at least 13 occasions she watched Thomas’s vitals drop so badly that doctors rushed in to save him.
On four occasions, Fiona says, he had to be brought off the ventilator so medics could manually work his lungs with a bag.
“You are never prepared for the notion your baby might die, I think I was in denial at first,” Sadie says. “Over the coming hours, days and weeks, doctors would consistently tell me that “your baby is very, very, very sick”. I later realised this was code for ‘there is a distinct possibility that your baby will die’.”
After keeping him alive for six days, it was only then that doctors suspected some kind of heart condition, but couldn’t do any more for him – so he was transferred to a children’s hospital.
But after returning a positive Covid result herself, Sadie was separated from Thomas before his journey to the children’s hospital.
Not long after, Sadie’s husband Steven was reunited with their son but Sadie was forced to isolate in flat across the road from the hospital.
A cardiologist quickly carried out a heart echo and diagnosed Thomas with TAPVR – a rare condition where oxygen-rich blood from the lungs does not flow to the correct place, limiting the oxygen delivered to the rest of the body.
The very next day, at four weeks old, Thomas was booked in for open heart surgery with the surgeon explaining the procedure over Zoom to Sadie and Steven.
The heart surgery was over in less than five hours and it was successful, Fiona explains, and Thomas bounced back incredibly quickly.
The fluid from his lungs disappeared within a day and he was off the ventilator within four, meanwhile his sedation was stopped in seven days.
After a few long, hard days in isolation across the road, Sadie’s spirits were lifted and was once again reunited with Steven and their son.
Sadie said: “After all we’ve been through, it’s a joy to be getting on with the mundane chores of motherhood like nappies and sleepless nights.”
Fiona explains that her nephew’s heart defect is just a coincidence, according to doctors and that it isn’t a genetic issue in their family.
However, Fiona says: “There are fears that patients are dying elsewhere on coronavirus wards because other underlying conditions are not spotted when the virus cloaks their symptoms.
“In the six days before the heart defect was discovered, my nephew came chillingly close to becoming another statistic of the pandemic.”
In other real life news, a mum tells of how her newborn died as they slept together but now cruel strangers in the street call her ‘baby killer’ .
Meanwhile, one woman told how distressing it was to deliver her child, knowing he had died in her womb.
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