A testimony of the Miraculous , Baby Survives Cancer While Still In Her Mother's WOMB
Joyful
Jenna Smith looks a picture of health in her Christmas top reaching for her
toys.
It is
only on closer inspection that her tiny neck tube is visible – the only hint
of her
remarkable fight for life.
Jenna
was still in the womb when a scan revealed she had tennis-ball-sized neck
tumour pressing on her windpipe.
So
when she was born doctors had to perform a lifesaving tracheotomy, inserting a
breathing tube into her throat.
The
lump proved to be
cancerous so the eight-month-old has had extensive chemotherapy. Now
it looks as if she has beaten the cancer – much to the relief of parents Lisa
and Anthony, both 38.
But
damage to her throat means she can still make only the faintest gurgle.
Anthony told the Sunday People: “Through all this we’ve
never heard her cry.
Tumour:
Jenna as a newborn before the lump was removed
"People
complain about their babies keeping them up at night. But I’d give anything to
hear Jenna cry.
"That
would make me cry myself.”
Lisa
said: “I’d never thought it was possible for a baby to get cancer while still
in the womb.
"She’s
a real miracle. She hasn’t had her first birthday and she’s already fought for
her life.”
Support
worker Lisa and postman Anthony, of Penrith, Cumbria, had been thrilled by the pregnancy.
But then Lisa was diagnosed with diabetes in her third trimester, and a
32-week scan revealed the tumour on Jenna’s neck.
Lisa
said: “The sonographer looked shocked and rushed out to get a consultant. I
didn’t see the scan. I didn’t want to look. I was devastated.”
Doctors
did not mention cancer but Lisa and Anthony feared the worst.
Fight
for life: But Jenna's parents hope her cancer battle is over
She
said: “We were terrified. I couldn’t bear to think of her having cancer as an
adult, let alone before she was born.”
Lisa’s
waters broke at 34 weeks and she was taken Newcastle’s Royal Victoria Infirmary
for surgery.
Surgeons
performed the tracheotomy before the umbilical cord
was cut.
When I
came to I couldn’t believe how big the lump on her throat was, sad Lisa. “But
she was alive and lying in my arms.”
After
two weeks in intensive care, the lump was taken out and tests showed it was
cancerous. Dad Anthony said: “It was just horrendous.”
Lisa
added: “We just cried constantly. To be told our baby had cancer was heartbreaking,
unbelievable.”
Jenna
began gruelling chemotherapy sessions with monthly scans to check her progress.
The couple replace her breathing tube every week but have to watch to make sure
she does not pull it out.
Looking
ahead: Lisa and Antony are delighted to have Jenna home for Christmas
Brave
Jenna has spent much of the holidays in hospital on chemo.
“Babies
should playing on mats and gurgling,” said Lisa. “Instead she’s tired and exhausted
from chemo.”
But
the New Year promises a brighter future.
Doctors
want her to finish treatment in February, confident the cancer has gone. In
March surgeons hope to work towards removing her tube.
“When
Jenna’s older we’ll tell her how lucky she’s been,” said Lisa.
Anthony
said: “We are so incredibly proud. Jenna’s the strongest one of all of us.
She’s been the one carrying us.”
Via
- Mirror.
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