New Zealand surgeons cut giant tumor from baby; 14-month-old Alex Gonzaga's tumor was almost one-third his total body weight. He comes from East Timor, where a doctor on a medical ship interceded on his behalf
In this photo released by the Port Nicholson Rotary Club and taken by the Wellington Hospital shows Alex Gonzaga, a 14-month-old East Timorese baby on a operating table as surgeons prepare to remove a tumor almost one-third of his body weight in Wellington, New Zealand, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2008. Surgeons cut out the 7.3-pound (3.3-kilogram) benign tumor successfully and baby Alex is expected to make a full recovery with no long term consequences.
(AP Photo/Wellington Hospital,HO)New Zealand surgeons cut giant tumor from baby
WELLINGTON, New Zealand – Doctors removed a tumor from an East Timorese baby that was almost one-third the child's body weight during a life-saving operation in New Zealand, officials said Thursday.
Surgeons cut out the 7.3-pound benign tumor on Sunday from the abdomen of 14-month-old Alex Gonzaga at Wellington Hospital, hospital spokeswoman Trish Lee said.
The boy weighed about 24 pounds before the surgery and is expected to make a full recovery with no long term consequences, Lee said.
Bill Day, president of the Port Nicholson Rotary Club that sponsored the project, said Alex was already eating, moving about and well on the way to recovery.
"He's looking good, he's standing up holding on to mum, smiling and playing with toys — throwing things on the floor — you wouldn't think there was anything wrong with him," he told The Associated Press.
Doctors expect the boy will be ready to go home in about 10 days.
His mother, Elisa Da Conceicao, said she was very happy with the operation and looking forward to breast-feeding her son again, Wellington's Dominion Post newspaper reported Wednesday.
The tumor originally was spotted by a doctor in impoverished East Timor and scanned on a visiting medical ship. The operation in New Zealand involved a surgical team of 10 doctors.
Surgical team leader Brendon Bowkett said Alex would have died if he had not had the operation, in which 10 surgeons removed the huge tumor mass from crucial structures, including the urinary tract.
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