Iraqi girl undergoes surgery for rare disease
However, in spinal AVM, the blood passes dir-ectly from arteries to the veins, bypassing the capillaries.
New Delhi: A 19-year-old Iraqi girl, suffering from a rare spinal disease, which affects blood supply in the spinal cord, got a new lease of life after undergoing surgery at a city-based hospital.
Nuha Mohanad Hani was suffering from spinal arteriovenous malformation (AVM), a rare form of disorder, in which there is an abnormal tangle of blood vessels in or near the spinal cord. It can permanently damage the spinal cord if not treated on time, said Dr P. N. Renjen, senior consultant of Neurology at the Indraprastha Apollo Hospital.
Oxygen-rich blood generally enters the spinal cord through arteries, which further branches into smaller blood vessels called capillaries. After delivering oxygen to the spinal cord, blood then passes into the veins that drain it away from the spinal cord to the heart and lungs.
“However, in spinal AVM, the blood passes directly from arteries to the veins, bypassing the capillaries. This disorder in blood flow deprives the surrounding cells of vital oxygen, causing cells in the spinal tissues to deteriorate or die,” Dr Renjen explained. It can also cau-se rupture of arteries and veins causing bleeding in the spinal cord, called haemorrhage.
Ms Nuha was suffering from progressive quadriplegia, paralysis caused by illness or injury resulting in partial or total loss of use of all the four limbs and torso. She was suffering from this condition for over a month and also had urine and stool incontinence.
“We found out that she had an injury two months back followed by quadriplegia and breathing issues. She was treated for this in her country but did not respond well to it and her condition kept on worsening,” Dr Renjen said.