Photos: 22-month old girl undergoes successful skull defect surgery in Canada
The
22 month-old girl, Fidelis Muthoni from Makuyu in Murang’a county, Kenya who was suffering
from frontal encephalocele underwent a free operation in Toronto, Canada to remove a bone growth on her face.
The
Canadian doctors volunteered to operate on her for free when her father
Kenneth Kinuthia met them in Kiambu county during a medical
camp. Muthoni’s plight was highlighted when the family
accused her uncle, Hope Foundation founder Joseph Wanjau, of
misappropriating the ticket money.
Fortunately, Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta intervened and bought
air tickets for mother and child to travel before the appointment was
called off.
A Kenyan couple in Toronto – Irene & Joseph Maina – also kindly
offered to host Martha & Fidelis for free, for as long as they
needed. In addition, Irene who is a nurse by profession took it upon
herself to transport the two and attend numerous pre-surgery
consultative meetings and tests in preparation for Fidelis’s surgery.
Various reports and individuals have at different times erroneously
cited Fidelis’s condition as a tumour. Now that the first surgery has
successfully been completed and with help of some reports from her
doctors, we can correct that. What Fidelis has is referred to as frontal encephalocele, a skull defect characterized by partial lack of bone fusion leaving a gap through which a portion of the brain protrudes.
These images are a 3D replica of Fidelis’s skull before the surgery.
You will notice that she was missing the frontal bone (at the forehead)
leaving her brain exposed and hanging on the outside.
The goal therefore of this recently performed surgery, known as anterior cranial vault reconstruction,
was to enlarge her skull so that the part of the brain hanging outside
could be pushed back in. After successfully doing that, the surgeons
then grafted a bone from her skull to cover the opening so that she now
has a forehead.
Part of the surgery is done and there remain other complex
surgeries which will among other things involve residual cosmetic work
that is needed to reconstruct the nose and bring her eyes closer
together. Unfortunately, due to Fidelis’s age (22 months) and an
infection that developed after this first surgery, subsequent surgeries
will have to wait until she is much older.
On January 25, Fidelis was medically cleared by the team at
Sick Kids, referred and accepted into the care of two doctors in Kenya:
Dr. Bernard Githae, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon at Kenyatta
National Hospital and Dr. Peter Wanyoike, a consultant neurosurgeon
formerly of KNH and the one in charge of Fidelis’ referral.
Photos: 22-month old girl undergoes successful skull defect surgery in Canada
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