Girl, 7, has six vital organs removed
MSNBC
Girl, 7, has six vital organs removed
Heather McNamara survived 23-hour operation, first of its kind in child
Video
Girl has six vital organs removed
March 10: Seven-year-old Heather McNamara is being released from a New York hospital after a cancerous tumor caused doctors to remove six of her vital organs. The McNamara family appears at a press conference.
MSNBC
Most popular
• Most viewed • Top rated • Most e-mailed
156 pounds lighter, she's half her former size
Some wounded soldiers ‘punished for injuries’
Lawyer says Madoff to plead guilty Thursday
'Fight club' probed at home for disabled
Grandpa is ... browsing your Facebook page
Most viewed on msnbc.com
Grandmother, 84, rides again for birthday
Sometimes even St. Bernards need rescuing
Company shares $9 million with employees
'Invisibility cloak' directs light away from eye
She sent him to jail for rape; now they’re friends
Most viewed on msnbc.com
'Fight club' probed at home for disabled
Grandpa is ... browsing your Facebook page
Some wounded soldiers ‘punished for injuries’
Lawyer says Madoff to plead guilty Thursday
Discover riches in Peru’s original City of Gold
Most viewed on msnbc.com
msnbc.com
updated 12:59 p.m. ET, Tues., March. 10, 2009
A 7-year-old Long Island girl was released from a New York hospital Tuesday, more than a month after surgeons removed six of her vital organs to tackle a life-threatening tumor.
Heather McNamara was doing "fantastic," said her father, Joseph McNamara, as the Islip Terrace family prepared to return home. On Feb. 6, a team lead by Dr. Tomoaki Kato at New York Presbyterian-Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital conducted the first surgery of its kind in a child.
During the 23-hour operation, doctors removed Heather's stomach, pancreas, liver, spleen and small and large intestines to get at a cancerous tumor the size of a baseball, according to news reports. They couldn't save the child's stomach, pancreas or spleen, which were riddled with cancer.
Story continues below ↓advertisement | your ad here
The girl now has a pouch fashioned from intestinal tissue to hold food, doctors told USA Today. Cancer experts said that while it used to be impossible to live without a pancreas, daily injections of insulin and enzyme pills can substitute.
Appearing bright and happy and clutching a teddy bear from hospital officials, Heather said she was looking forward to returning home to play with her sister and her dog, Angel.
__________________
Kytcat
|