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09-27-2006, 09:19 AM
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It really is unfortunate. I have a highschool classmate whose child was born this way. They put the organs back inside and the child is still alive and healthy today, ten years later. I wonder what else was going on medically since they didn't do this?
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09-27-2006, 09:22 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jhujenn
It really is unfortunate. I have a highschool classmate whose child was born this way. They put the organs back inside and the child is still alive and healthy today, ten years later. I wonder what else was going on medically since they didn't do this?
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Is that the same thing as spina bifida?
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09-27-2006, 09:33 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KLPDaisy
Is that the same thing as spina bifida?
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no, I don't think so. Spina bifida is only your spine - this is things like the liver, kidneys etc.
A former coworker's child had this condition also. They managed to get everything working and she is doing fine today.
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09-27-2006, 09:39 AM
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I really hope this isn't true....I've been scouring the web and so far, no "major" news sources have carried the story yet.
Question for the people who know survivors of this condition...can't this be detected via ultrasound?
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09-27-2006, 09:49 AM
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Having not been pregnant myself, I don't know if it can be detected by an ultrasound.
But, my friend who is pregnant (4-5 months along) said that she had her LAST ultrasound at 4 months. Soooo, if something were to happen further in the pregnancy to the baby but she felt no signs of anything being wrong, there wouldn't be a reason for an ultrasound. Now, if you are a high risk pregnancy that might be different, but I'd imagine if she was high risk something like this might have been detected earlier.
As for the organs, we don't know what organs were "outside" of her body. Maybe there were to many outside that they (the doctors) just weren't able to save her. Who knows.
If in fact the story is reliable.
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09-27-2006, 09:59 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ASUADPi
But, my friend who is pregnant (4-5 months along) said that she had her LAST ultrasound at 4 months. Soooo, if something were to happen further in the pregnancy to the baby but she felt no signs of anything being wrong, there wouldn't be a reason for an ultrasound.
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I've never heard of this. Usually they do an initial ultrasound (depending on availability of equipment) at you first visit or two, then another around 20 weeks, and then another around 36 weeks. The first ultrasound is the most accurate in confirming due date. The second is a scan to make sure the baby has 10 fingers, 10 toes, etc, and is used in gender determination (if the parents want to know, and the baby cooperates). The third one is used to estimate weight/size, and check the postion of the baby (at this point, the baby should be in a head down postion, with it's back to the mother's stomach).
My at 37 week ultrasound, they did the 3-D one, and I could see everything - eyes, ears, nose, mouth, hair. It was just short of an actual picture. I'm not sure how a 3-D ultra could miss organs outside the body.
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09-27-2006, 11:03 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AlphaFrog
I've never heard of this. Usually they do an initial ultrasound (depending on availability of equipment) at you first visit or two, then another around 20 weeks, and then another around 36 weeks. The first ultrasound is the most accurate in confirming due date. The second is a scan to make sure the baby has 10 fingers, 10 toes, etc, and is used in gender determination (if the parents want to know, and the baby cooperates). The third one is used to estimate weight/size, and check the postion of the baby (at this point, the baby should be in a head down postion, with it's back to the mother's stomach).
My at 37 week ultrasound, they did the 3-D one, and I could see everything - eyes, ears, nose, mouth, hair. It was just short of an actual picture. I'm not sure how a 3-D ultra could miss organs outside the body. 
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I think you are one of the exceptions. On the other Family Planning sites I frequent (where the women are from a variety of incomes and locations across the US, Europe and Australia), the majority of pregnant women only get 1 ultrasound, and if they want a 3-D one, they have to go somewhere and pay for it.
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It's gonna be a hootenanny.
Or maybe a jamboree.
Or possibly even a shindig or lollapalooza.
Perhaps it'll be a hootshinpaloozaree. I don't know.
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09-27-2006, 09:57 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Senusret I
I really hope this isn't true....I've been scouring the web and so far, no "major" news sources have carried the story yet.
Question for the people who know survivors of this condition...can't this be detected via ultrasound?
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I would think so. They have really accurate picture where you can see eyelids and stuff so I don't understand why it can't be detected.
I know every doctor and patient is different, for me the last ultrasound for both of the kids came about a month from giving birth. All of the organs should be inside at this point since the child can live on it's own usually and is just gaining weight.
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09-27-2006, 10:14 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Senusret I
I really hope this isn't true....I've been scouring the web and so far, no "major" news sources have carried the story yet.
Question for the people who know survivors of this condition...can't this be detected via ultrasound?
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Even with advances in technology, ultrasounds can still miss issues in utero such as this. It depends on so many variables: the experience of the technician, the quality of the u/s image, the position and age of the fetus, etc...
Last year my niece was born with a defect called a Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia where where diaphragm didn't close properly and some of her internal organs moved from her abdomen through the space in her diaphragm and into her chest cavity, inhibiting the growth of her lungs and pushing her heart over. Babies born with this condition have about a 50% survival rate. My sister and BIL had no idea anything was wrong until my niece was born--the one u/s they had showed everything as looking "normal." Other babies with CDH have been diagnosed in utero, though, through ultrasounds. It all just depends. Thankfully, my niece was able to have surgery a few days after she was born and is now a happy, thriving 13-month-old.
Most women do only get one u/s during their pregnancy -- usually around 18-22 weeks gestation, but even that can vary from OB to OB. For various reasons, I had 4 u/s during my pregnancy (one early on to check for a cyst, the level II at 21 weeks and two later to check growth).
Anyway, I hope it's not true.
__________________
It's gonna be a hootenanny.
Or maybe a jamboree.
Or possibly even a shindig or lollapalooza.
Perhaps it'll be a hootshinpaloozaree. I don't know.
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09-27-2006, 03:32 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Senusret I
I really hope this isn't true....I've been scouring the web and so far, no "major" news sources have carried the story yet.
Question for the people who know survivors of this condition...can't this be detected via ultrasound?
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I haven't found any other news links to this story, either. That's why I wasn't sure if it was legit or not.
At the same time, I don't know how anyone could break a story this horrific and heartbreaking if it wasn't true.
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09-27-2006, 05:23 PM
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I saw it on the ticker on the bottom of E! channel this afternoon.
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09-27-2006, 05:39 PM
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This is now posted on People.com
Reverend Run's Baby Dies at Birth
WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 27, 2006 04:20PM EST
The baby daughter of rap legend Reverend Run and his wife Justine died at birth.
Run (real name: Joseph Simmons) issued the following statement on Wednesday through MTV: "On September 26, 2006, Victoria Anne Simmons for some unknown reason chose to come early and unfortunately did not survive.
"We must accept whatever is there and once you accept unconditionally, then everything is beautiful. Every pain has a purifying effect."
The baby was delivered Tuesday at Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, N.J., the Associated Press reports. Justine Simmons is fine.
Run, a founding member of the seminal rap group Run-D.M.C., and his wife have three sons. The family stars in the MTV reality series Run's House.
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How extremely sad for their family.
__________________
It's gonna be a hootenanny.
Or maybe a jamboree.
Or possibly even a shindig or lollapalooza.
Perhaps it'll be a hootshinpaloozaree. I don't know.
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