A Florida mother is home and tending to her new infant less
than a month after surviving without a pulse for 45 minutes following
complications from a routine cesarean section.
A spokesman for Boca Raton Regional Hospital told The
Associated Press on Sunday that a team of medical workers spent three hours
attempting to revive the woman after a rare amniotic fluid embolism.
Spokesman Thomas Chakurda says the doctors were preparing to
pronounce her death when a blip on a monitor indicated a heartbeat. Despite
going 45 minutes without a pulse, she suffered no brain damage during the Sept.
23 ordeal.
“She essentially spontaneously resuscitated when we were
about to call the time of death,” said Thomas Chakurda, the hospital spokesman.
Doctors had called the family into the operating room and
told them there was nothing more they could do for 40-year-old Ruby
Graupera-Cassimiro.
Graupera-Cassimiro gave birth to a healthy daughter before
amniotic fluid entered her bloodstream and heart and created a vacuum, stopping
circulation. Doctors say condition is often fatal.
Chakurda said the woman’s survival is a story of two
miracles — her resuscitation and the fact that she survived without serious
brain damage.
Medical workers used shock paddles and chest compressions
throughout the emergency to try and restore heart beat and circulation,
Chakurda said.
“Today she is the picture of health,” he said.
Doctors had no immediate explanation for her survival,
Chakurda said, calling her case one of “divine providence.”
Graupera-Cassimiro did not return a phone message left by
The Associated Press on Sunday.
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