UAE doctors save 21-year-old with rare heart defect

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The cardiac surgery team in Ahalia hospital, which conducted the open heart surgery to remove the abnormal membrane of Zahid Ul Haq (left), Zahid Ul Haq Amin was taken to the hospital after heart failure and shortness of breath (right)
The cardiac surgery team in Ahalia hospital, which conducted the open heart surgery to remove the abnormal membrane of Zahid Ul Haq (left), Zahid Ul Haq Amin was taken to the hospital after heart failure and shortness of breath (right)

Dubai - Usually this type of heart defect is detected in infancy or childhood, but this patient had a delayed presentation.

by

Asma Ali Zain

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Published: Thu 11 May 2017, 6:50 PM

A 21-year-old Pakistani, suffering from a rare heart defect that occurs in one in every one million people, was saved when doctors in Abu Dhabi corrected the defect during surgery.
The blue-collar worker, Zahid Ul Haq Amin, who has been based in Abu Dhabi for the past one and half years was brought to Al Ahlia Hospital, Mussaffah, last week with shortness of breath and heart failure.
"The patient was very young for heart failure," said Dr Santosh Mathew, consultant cardiac surgeon, while speaking to Khaleej Times.
"Upon investigation we found that his heart was divided into three chambers instead of the normal two that every person has. This is a rare congenital defect which occurs only in one in a million people," said Dr Santosh.
The defect is a congenital heart defect where the left atrium (cor triatriatum sinistrum) is subdivided by a thin membrane, resulting in three atrial chambers.
"He was found to have a heart with three atria in which the left atrium was divided into two compartments by a membrane," said Dr Santosh.
In addition, Zahid had a large defect in the wall separating the right and left atria called atrial septal defect with abnormal pulmonary venous drainage.
"Usually this type of heart defect is detected in infancy or childhood, but this patient had a delayed presentation which is seen in very few cases," said the doctor adding that normally such cases do not survive beyond infancy since the heart defect puts huge pressure on the lungs.
Zahid was immediately taken for an open-heart surgery in which the abnormal membrane was removed and the anomalous vein was redirected to the proper heart chamber and the septal defect closed with a patch.
The surgery was also performed by Dr Nirav Sangani, specialist cardiothoracic surgery. The patient is currently recovering.
Zahid, who belongs to Peshawar and is due to fly home in a couple of days, said that he was doing much better. "I have these symptoms earlier and had consulted doctors in Pakistan but did not receive proper treatment," he said.
A friend of Zahid's who rushed him to hospital during the emergency said: "I saw him struggling to breath and he was clutching his chest with pain so I took him to hospital immediately."
Although congenital heart defects are present since birth, some may go undetected and may lead to symptoms and complications in adulthood. They can be diagnosed by an echocardiogram.
Surgery can be performed to treat such defects that will prevent further damage to the heart improve symptoms and increase survival, said the doctor.
asmaalizain@khaleejtimes.com


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