Iraqi accident victim gets new lease of life in India
May 14th, 2010 - 2:31 pm ICT by IANSBy Sugandha Pathak
Gurgaon, May 14 (IANS) For 23-year-old Dler Asaad, an Iraqi garage worker critically injured in a car crash, life in the last four years had been a journey of failed attempts at recovering - until he came to India.
“Earlier I underwent 17 operations - on my brain, eyes and 11 of them on my trachea,” said Asaad, sporting a broad smile as he recovers after a successful surgery at the Artemis Health Institute in Gurgaon bordering Delhi.
In 2006, Asaad met with a near fatal car accident. He was kept on the ventilator for 20 days. The holes made for ventilator support created two abnormal cavities in his trachea and this led to complications like food getting into the windpipe and choking him. The trachea is a tube-like portion of the breathing or respiratory tract that connects the voice box with the bronchial part of the lungs.
Though the surgeries - in Iraq as well as other countries - on his brain and eyes were successful after a few attempts, the severe condition of the trachea made him disillusioned.
“I went to Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Turkey and got my surgeries done there. But all of them were failed attempts. I was losing hope,” Asaad, clad in an orange T-shirt and blue track pants, told IANS in an interview.
With every unsuccessful surgery his condition worsened, as 11 operations in the same area added to complications.
And then he came to India.
A team of doctors headed by Kushagra Katariya, CEO and chief cardiothoracic surgeon, and including Deepak Sarin, consultant on head and neck surgery, and Hassan Tehrani, head of medical services, from the Artemis Health Institute, conducted the operation last month.
“This was my last-ditch effort; I knew a person who was treated by doctor Tehrani and he told me to give my last shot here. When I spoke to Tehrani, he told me that in this condition I have a 90 percent chance of successful surgery. This was more than enough for me to undertake this long journey to India,” Asaad said.
Showing the deep hole on his stomach, Asaad said: “Now I can eat from my mouth.”
He now plans to buy T-shirts as in the last four years he wore only high necks. “People kept asking me about these scars and the holes on my throat. Now I can walk freely,” Asaad told IANS.
Asaad’s mother too is thanking the almighty for his recovery.
“I am happy now my son can eat properly; in these last four years the food used to go through a pipe attached directly to his stomach, now he can eat properly,” she added
Katariya said: “It was a four-hour-long surgery; we were confident and clear about what needed to be done. Though it was an unusual case we have treated similar cases before. We are glad that he can now lead a healthy life.”
Sarin said: “The structure of Asaad’s neck was completely distorted due to the failed surgeries earlier. The rarity of the case was due to the two abnormal openings in the throat region. The surgery was a challenge, but we were confident.”
Asaad, who was discharged from hospital a few days back, did not like the guest house he was given and decided to come back to stay at the hospital.
“The doctors here are very nice; everybody is concerned about me,” Asaad further added.
He stated that he has only happy memories of India. Preparing to leave for his country, he said he will be back in another six months.
(Sugandha Pathak can be contacted at sugandha.p@ians.in)
- Complex heart surgery on 26-week premature baby - Oct 18, 2011
- Helping slum children dream big - and go to college (Feature) - Nov 21, 2010
- Eight-hour heart surgery saves woman's life - Aug 26, 2009
- Wiped off streets for CWG, vendors scramble for living - Nov 14, 2010
- Woman speaks for the first time in 11yrs following voice box transplant - Jan 21, 2011
- They think we're easy target: Northeast youth in Delhi - Dec 08, 2010
- World's first intubation robot operated by remote control introduced - Apr 16, 2011
- Relatives create ruckus at Gurgaon's Artemis Hospital - Apr 24, 2012
- Tweets not sweet: Can spell trouble in divorce cases - Apr 05, 2010
- Minister inaugurates organ transplant unit - Jun 12, 2010
- Remark on Dasmunshi angers West Bengal Congress - Sep 18, 2010
- Domestic violence cases on the rise in Delhi courts - Aug 19, 2010
- Delhi hospital conducts life-saving robotic surgeries - Apr 20, 2012
- Students campaign against junk food - Dec 19, 2011
- Indian doctors cure Iraqi's 15-year-old 'curse' - Feb 01, 2012
Tags: accident victim, car crash, cardiothoracic surgeon, dler, fatal car accident, gurgaon, head and neck surgery, health institute, journe, last ditch effort, new lease, pathak, respiratory tract, syria lebanon, tehrani, trachea, track pants, ventilator support, voice box, windpipe