EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews image
News image
Front Page
News image
World
News image
UK
News image
UK Politics
News image
Business
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Health
News image
Education
News image
Sport
News image
Entertainment
News image
Talking Point
News image
In Depth
News image
On Air
News image
Archive
News image
News image
News image
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help
News imageNews imageNews image
News imageFriday, April 2, 1999 Published at 16:58 GMT 17:58 UK
News image
News image
Health
News image
Baby fitted with pacemaker
News image
Katie weighed just 4lb when she was fitted with the device
News image
A premature baby, weighing just 4lb, has become Britain's youngest patient to be fitted with a heart pacemaker.

Doctors at the Diana Princess of Wales Children's Hospital, Birmingham, fitted the device to Katie Burke in a minor surgical operation when she was just three weeks old.


News imageNews image
Katie's mother Sue: "There's a long piece of wire curled up inside her"
Katie, whose twin sister Joanna was born without complications, was diagnosed as having a complex heart condition during her mother's pregnancy and was first operated on just hours after her birth.

That surgery was followed up with the fitting of a specially-configured pacemaker, the size of a 50p piece, which was inserted under her left armpit.

Simplified operation

Consultant paediatric cardiologist Joseph De Giovanni, who fitted the device, said the procedure was a success.

"We are very happy in that we have managed to simplify the way we do the operation," he said.

"Normally we would have needed to operate to put the pacemaker inside. But this time we have been able to do it without opening up the chest," he said.

Pacemakers can be fitted to patients with an irregular or no heartbeat and are usually placed in the chest cavity, in a relatively minor operation under general anaesthetic.

The devices regulate the beat by sending an electrical charge from a tiny lithium battery down a wire to the heart muscle.

Novel idea

Mr De Giovanni said that although they had not opened up Katie's chest, "obviously it is still difficult in a child of this size because the veins are very small and there is not much room to put the pacemaker".

Katie's mother, Mrs Sue Burke, 36, from Stechford, Birmingham, said: "I was shocked when we were told she needed a pacemaker.

"Although we knew she needed treatment for heart problems no-one considered a pacemaker for a baby.

"It has saved her life."

Mrs Burke, added: "We just feel immense relief that they had the technology to do this.

"She should now be able to lead a normal life."

News image


Advanced options | Search tips


News image
News image
News imageBack to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |
News image

News imageNews imageNews image
Health Contents
News image
News imageBackground Briefings
News imageMedical notes
News imageNews image
Relevant Stories
News image
22 Mar 99�|�Health
Angina treatment under development
News image
28 Feb 99�|�Health
Transplant first in Japan
News image
24 Feb 99�|�Health
Keyhole first for vascular surgeon
News image
17 Feb 99�|�Health
Space technology saves lives
News image
05 Nov 98�|�Health
Security gates pose threat to heart devices
News image

News image
News image
News image
News imageInternet Links
News image
News imageNews image
British Heart Foundation
News image
Heart Surgery Forum
News image
The Heart: An Online Exploration
News image
News imageNews image
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

News image
News image
News image
News imageIn this section
News image
Disability in depth
News image
Spotlight: Bristol inquiry
News image
Antibiotics: A fading wonder
News image
Mental health: An overview
News image
Alternative medicine: A growth industry
News image
The meningitis files
News image
Long-term care: A special report
News image
Aids up close
News image
From cradle to grave
News image
NHS reforms: A guide
News image
NHS Performance 1999
News image
From Special Report
NHS in crisis: Special report
News image
British Medical Association conference '99
News image
Royal College of Nursing conference '99
News image

News image
News image
News image