• Haemophilia patient’s bladder reconstructed in Bangaluru hospital

    • December 30, 2019
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    A Haemophilia patient’s urinary bladder was reconstructed through surgery at the privately-run Fortis hospital in this tech hub, an official said on Tuesday.

    “The surgery was performed by a team of doctors on a 38-year-old overseas patient, diagnosed with cancer bladder though he was in a haemophilia condition,” Fortis urology director Mohan Keshavamurthy said in a statement here.

    Touted to be the world’s first surgical removal of the urinary bladder on a patient whose ability of the blood to clot is reduced, the doctors replaced his knee and reconstructed his anterior cruciate ligament of the Haemophilia patient.

    “This was our first complex radical cystectomy (surgical removal of bladder) on a Haemophilia patient in two days despite challenges,” said Keshavamurthy.

    Haemophilia is a bleeding disorder where the patient suffers from defective clotting protein and requires external blood factors to avoid bleeding in case of an injury.

    The surgery required the bladder affected with cancer to be removed and a new bladder reconstructed using the small intestine.

    “The risk of bleeding while reconstructing the bladder is a challenge in such patients and care was taken to maintain absolute hemostasis,” said hospital’s urology consultant Karthik Rao on the occasion.

    According to hospital’s director Niti Raizada, the country has an estimated 1 lakh haemophiliacs although many others remain undiagnosed.

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