|
Brain-dead Woman Dies after giving Birth
Pakistan
Times
Monitoring Desk
ARLINGTON, Va. (US): A day
after Jason Torres
welcomed
his daughter into the world, he bid a final farewell to his brain-dead wife
who had been kept alive so the baby inside her could live.
Doctors removed Susan Torres, 26, from life support on Thursday with the
consent of her husband after she received the final sacrament of the Roman
Catholic Church.
"We thank all of those who prayed and provided support for Susan, the baby
and our family," Jason Torres said in a statement.
"We especially thank God
for giving us little Susan. My wife's courage will never be forgotten."
Susan Torres, a researcher at the National Institutes of Health, suffered a
stroke in May after melanoma spread to her brain. With no hope for recovery,
her family decided to keep her alive to give her fetus a chance.
It became a race between the fetus' development and the cancer that was
ravaging the woman's body. Doctors said that Torres' health was
deteriorating and that the risk of harm to the fetus finally outweighed the
benefits of extending the pregnancy.
Premature Baby
Torres gave birth to a daughter, Susan Anne Catherine Torres, by Caesarean
section on Tuesday at Virginia Hospital Center. The baby was about two
months premature and weighed 1 pound, 13 ounces. She was in the neonatal
intensive care unit.
Dr. Donna Tilden-Archer, the hospital's director of neonatology, described
the child as "very vigorous." She said the baby had responded when she
received stimulation, indicating she was healthy.
English-language medical literature contains at least 11 cases since 1979 of
irreversibly brain-damaged women whose lives were prolonged for the benefit
of the developing fetus, according to the University of Connecticut Health
Center.
Dr. Christopher McManus, who coordinated care for Susan Torres, put the
infant's chances of developing cancer at less than 25 percent. He said 19
women who have had the same aggressive form of melanoma as Torres have given
birth, and five of their babies contracted the disease.
McManus said there were no signs the cancer had crossed the placenta, which
would greatly increase the baby's risk for the disease. McManus said the
placenta itself is being examined for any evidence of cancer.
Jason Torres had quit his job to be by his wife's side, spending each night
sleeping in a reclining chair next to her bed. The couple have one other
child — 2-year-old Peter, who has been staying with his grandparents.
"This is obviously a bittersweet time for our family," Justin Torres, the
woman's brother-in-law, said in a statement.
A Web site was set up to help raise money for the family's mounting medical
bills and had raised more than $600,000 as of Tuesday. Any excess money will
be donated to cancer research and to establish a college savings plan for
the two children.●
|