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Wednesday, January 27, 2010


World`s Smallest Baby :))

SHE was 9in long when she was born and weighed under 8oz, about the weight of a fizzy drink can or a mobile phone.

A little girl who's believed to be the smallest surviving baby in the world has been sent home from the hospital.

Rumaisa Rahman was born in September weighing only 8.6 ounces. That's about the size of a cellphone.

She was discharged on Tuesday from Loyola University Medical Center in the Chicago suburb of Maywood. She currently weighs 5.5 pounds and is more than 16 inches longA Loyola doctor says Rumaisa's prognosis is very good and she's expected to develop normally.

Her fraternal twin sister, Hiba, was discharged on January 9. Hiba was only one pound, four ounces at birth but now weighs in at 8.5 pounds.

The babies' 23-year-old mother developed pre-eclampsia, a disorder characterized by high blood pressure, during pregnancy. The condition endangered Rumaisa and her mother, prompting a C-section at 26 weeks. Normal gestation is 40 weeks.

The twins were placed on ventilators for a few weeks and fed intravenously for a week or two until nurses could give them breast milk through feeding tubes. They were able to start drinking from bottles after about 10 weeksMadeline Mann, the previous record holder as smallest known surviving premature baby, returned to Loyola Hospital last year for a celebration. Now 15, she was described as a lively honor student, though small for her age, at 4 feet and 7 inches.

According to the hospital, more than 1,700 newborns weighing less than 2 pounds have been cared for there in the past 20 years.

Stephen Davidow, a hospital spokesman, said a routine delivery costs about $6,000, while caring for a premature baby costs about $5,000 a day. Rumaisa is covered by Medicaid, hospital officials said
She made her parents cry, lying there all wrinkly, hooked up to the wires and the oxygen, dwarfed by her incubator and less than half the size of her twin.

But Rumaisa Rahman, born 14 weeks early, battled for life and claimed her place yesterday in the record books as the smallest baby known to survive. She and her sister, Hiba, who weighed just 1lb 4oz at birth but is now a healthy 5lb, were delivered on September 19 by Caesarean section near Chicago.

Doctors took the agonising decision to deliver them at just twenty-five weeks and six days because their mother was suffering from such high blood pressure that her life, and the life of the twins she was carrying, were at risk.

The gamble paid off. Rumaisa, who is now 2lb 10oz — a respectable weight for a premature baby — broke a 15-year-old record set by a baby at the same hospital whose birth weight was just under 10oz.

Officials at the Loyola University Medical Centre in Maywood, Illinois, say that the twins are doing very well. Hiba, whose name means “gift from God”, could be home by Christmas, and her sister, whose name means “white as milk”, will probably follow her in the new year.

It was a happy ending to a rollercoaster year for the first-time parents Mahajabeen Shaik, 23, and Mohammed Abdul Rahman, 32, who married in India in January and quickly learnt that they were expecting twins.

The parents, originally from Hyderabad, were first allowed to hold the babies during their second month of life. Until then, they had only been able to touch them. “It was such a great feeling, to be able to hold my babies, touch them and kiss them,” the mother said.

She recalled her first glimpse of them the day after they were born. ”I was crying because they were both so small,” she said. “I was not expecting them to be so small.”

In their American home in the village of Hanover Park, Illinois, the mother learnt that she had developed pre-eclampsia, a condition that typically sets in after 20 weeks of gestation and complicates up to 7 per cent of pregnancies. It can stunt foetal growth and cause kidney failure and a string of other potentially fatal conditions in the mother. It is the third leading cause of pregnancy-related death. The only reliable treatment is delivery, which carries its own pitfalls.

Doctors prefer not to carry out Caesarean sections in such pregnancies because the baby already has a fight on its hands and the operation can carry risks for the newborn.

But things turned out well for the twins, who have had minimal interventions since.

They had laser surgery to correct vision problems typical among premature babies, but they are said to be thriving. Having started life on a drip, they are being exclusively bottle-fed and receiving minimal oxygen to help their underdeveloped lungs.

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