
April 8,
2005
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Out
of tragedy comes hope for a little boy
When 17-month-old Fadhil Muammar was discharged from the MGH April 1,
he left with a new lease on life — saved not only by the team of
MGH and MassGeneral Hospital for Children doctors and nurses who rallied
to care for him, but also, ironically, by the December tsunami that devastated
so much of his southeast Asian home.
MGH
Emergency Department physician Vicki Noble, MD, was in Banda Aceh, Indonesia,
in March with a medical team providing relief in the area through Project
HOPE when she met Fadhil (left) and his family. Fadhil had sustained
a head wound from the tsunami that had become infected, but it was the
abnormal swelling of the baby's abdomen that led his mother to seek out
the Project HOPE team. For months, Fadhil's belly had been growing increasingly
distended and rigid. Local doctors had given the family various diagnoses
and no hope for treatment. Noble determined that the swelling was caused
by a mesenchymal hamartoma: a liver tumor that, while benign, was large
enough — approximately the size of the toddler's head — to
put pressure on Fadhil's internal organs. If left to grow unchecked, it
would eventually become life-threatening.
Noble was working on the USNS Mercy, an 800-bed floating Navy hospital
equipped to handle the most prevalent health issues among tsunami survivors,
such as infections, bone fractures and mud aspiration pneumonias. Recognizing
the seriousness of Fadhil's condition and the limited resources of the
Mercy, she arranged for the boy and his family to travel to Boston for
treatment, overcoming a host of logistical hurdles along the way. "I
had volunteered with Project HOPE because I wanted to do what I could
to help, and Fadhil's case was hard to say no to," Noble explains.
"His condition was treatable with access to the right doctors and
facilities. His mother had taken him everywhere she could in Indonesia
and was absolutely tireless about finding an answer to his illness, even
in the face of tremendous adversity. I felt we had a responsibility to
care for them."
On March 19, Fadhil and his parents Miswar and Mahfud Muammar arrived
at the MGH. On March 28, MassGeneral Hospital for Children pediatric surgeons
Daniel Ryan, MD, and Daniel Doody, MD, removed the tumor and roughly 60
percent of Fadhil's liver in a three-and-a half-hour surgery. "Luckily,
the tumor was located on an area of the liver that is resectable,"
says Joseph Vacanti, MD, chief of Pediatric Surgery at MassGeneral Hospital
for Children. "The operation went very well using the tools of modern
liver surgery available here." By the next day, he was out of bed,
and within five days the little boy was discharged, a full week earlier
than expected.
Ryan describes his prognosis as excellent. Within the next two weeks,
the family should be able to return home to Indonesia. "It was enormously
gratifying to take part in Fadhil's care," Ryan says. "Untreated,
the tumor could have ruptured or developed cancerous characteristics,
and this little boy would have lived a life of constant pain. Now he has
the chance to be just like any other healthy toddler."
From
left, Nobel, Vacanti and Larry Ronan, MD, director of the MGH Durant Fellowship,
at a press conference about Fadhil
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