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BLUE BABY SYNDROME

A cyanotic newborn, or "blue baby"

'Blue baby syndrome' (or simply, 'blue baby') is a layman's term used to describe newborns with cyanotic conditions, such as

Cyanotic heart defects


Tetralogy of Fallot


Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries


Hypoplastic left heart syndrome

Methemoglobinemia

Respiratory distress syndrome
On November 29, 1944, the Johns Hopkins Hospital was the first to successfully perform an operation to relieve this syndrome. The syndrome was brought to the attention of surgeon Alfred Blalock and his laboratory assistant Vivien Thomas in 1943 by pediatric cardiologist Helen Taussig, who had treated hundreds of children with Tetralogy of Fallot in her work at Hopkins' Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children. The two men adapted a surgical procedure they had earlier developed for another purpose, involving the anastomosis, or joining, of the subclavian artery to the pulmonary artery, which allowed the blood another chance to become oxygenated. The procedure became known as the Blalock-Taussig shunt, although in recent years the contribution of Vivien Thomas, both experimentally and clinically, has been widely acknowledged.

Contents
References
External links

References



Partners of the Heart: Vivien Thomas and His Work with Alfred Blalock (originally published as Pioneering Research in Surgical Shock and Cardiovascuar Surgery: Vivien Thomas and His Work with Alfred Blalock), Thomas, Vivien T, , , U. Penn . Press, 1985,

External links



Blue Baby Operation

Something the Lord Made - HBO Movie on the Blue Baby Surgery

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