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Advances in prenatal care allow providers to diagnose many health conditions while your baby is still in utero. This allows your team to begin treatment planning before birth. If pediatric surgical care of newborns is part of the plan, Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ surgeons are ready to serve.
At Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ, care for your baby begins in the womb. Surgeons at Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital partner with you, counseling you along your and birth journey.
As your pregnancy advances, an expert multidisciplinary team helps you understand the unique needs of your soon-to-be-born child. You also learn how those needs will be addressed after birth.
When neonatal surgery is necessary, your child receives pre- and post-surgical care inside the 60-bed neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at the . There, you stay with your newborn in a private, single-bed room. This keeps you close to your baby, reducing stress and offering maximum bonding time.
Pediatric surgery helps address many issues faced by newborns.
When an issue makes it difficult for a newborn to breathe or swallow, surgery may be necessary.
Breathing and swallowing conditions that may benefit from surgery include:
Gastrointestinal (GI) abnormalities can make it difficult to pass stool and cause unwanted complications.
A few GI conditions newborns experience requiring surgery include:
Newborns with abdominal wall conditions may have internal organs poking out. Surgery closes the opening and returns organs to their proper places.
These conditions include:
The liver, bile ducts and gallbladder aid in digestion and help get waste out of the body. Issues with these organs can require immediate surgical intervention.
Two biliary anomalies treated at Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ are:
Whether tumors are cancerous or noncancerous (benign), removing them helps protect your newborn’s health and quality of life.
Tumors affecting newborns treated by pediatric surgeons include:
Each newborn pediatric surgery experience is unique. However, you can expect your child’s journey to have these parts.
Prior to surgery, members of our renowned newborn surgical team discuss the procedure with you. A surgeon or other professional answers your questions, ensuring you understand the purpose, method and expected outcome of your child’s procedure. An anesthesiologist explains methods used to keep your newborn comfortable during surgery.
Immediately before surgery, your child’s team will do the following:
Surgery takes place in an operating room. During the procedure, you remain in a waiting room or in your child’s NICU room.
Throughout the procedure, your child remains sedated and carefully monitored. For long surgeries, a member of the surgical team may update you occasionally on the surgery’s progress.
Your child’s recovery from surgery comes in stages.
To request an appointment with a pediatric surgeon, please . A member of our team will then connect you with a surgeon.
At Ä¢¹½ÊÓÆµ, our team of pediatric surgery experts provides advanced, compassionate care to newborns every day.
Pediatric surgeons ready to serve you include: