NEW DELHI: A 78-year-old woman went into respiratory misery on board an Air India flight from Delhi to London not too long ago after a gummy bear by accident got lodged in her windpipe. The woman could have choked to dying, but for well timed action via a physician couple from Delhi who saved resuscitating the septuagenarian until the time she regained awareness — a mid-air miracle that filled the passengers on board with joy and relief.
The pilots, in the meantime, managed to protected emergency landing in Budapest where emergency care took over the medical control. Budapest Airport’s AMS (Airport Medical Sevice) posted on its Facebook web page later that the gummy bear used to be got rid of from the patient’s airway, which helped revived breathing and stream.
Speaking to TOI over phone from London, Dr Anupam Goel and Dr Misha — the physician couple who work at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital — said the incident took place on Tuesday. “We had been travelling to London to wait a convention on endoscopic surgery. Midway, there used to be announcement about this woman collapsing unexpectedly and the will for a physician. We volunteered to help,” Goel said.
The explanation for respiratory misery wasn’t clear first of all, the doctors said. The 78-year-old woman, identified as Preetpal Kaur, used to be subconscious and frothing from the mouth and her pulse used to be feeble.
“Her blood power used to be also unrecordable. The patient used to be gasping. Her left pupil used to be dilated, which urged neuro involvement. There used to be also wheezing, which urged respiratory involvement. The explanation for respiratory misery wasn’t clear at that time,” Dr Goel recounted. He added that they put her on intravenous normal saline and started ventilating with AMBU bag mask ventilation and oxygen.
The woman used to be resuscitated for just about 40 minutes. “The passengers on board had been interestingly looking at us looking to revive the patient; some of them praying for her too. It worked. We managed to keep her from choking to dying with the limited method — lack of equipment like a laryngoscope to inspect the throat, sufficient normal saline and oxygen mask — until the time emergency landing could be made,” the physician couple said. Their successful try used to be celebrated via the passengers and even the flight team who proficient them a bottle of top class champagne. “We did our job as doctors. There’s not anything peculiar about it,” they said.
The pilots, in the meantime, managed to protected emergency landing in Budapest where emergency care took over the medical control. Budapest Airport’s AMS (Airport Medical Sevice) posted on its Facebook web page later that the gummy bear used to be got rid of from the patient’s airway, which helped revived breathing and stream.
Speaking to TOI over phone from London, Dr Anupam Goel and Dr Misha — the physician couple who work at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital — said the incident took place on Tuesday. “We had been travelling to London to wait a convention on endoscopic surgery. Midway, there used to be announcement about this woman collapsing unexpectedly and the will for a physician. We volunteered to help,” Goel said.
The explanation for respiratory misery wasn’t clear first of all, the doctors said. The 78-year-old woman, identified as Preetpal Kaur, used to be subconscious and frothing from the mouth and her pulse used to be feeble.
“Her blood power used to be also unrecordable. The patient used to be gasping. Her left pupil used to be dilated, which urged neuro involvement. There used to be also wheezing, which urged respiratory involvement. The explanation for respiratory misery wasn’t clear at that time,” Dr Goel recounted. He added that they put her on intravenous normal saline and started ventilating with AMBU bag mask ventilation and oxygen.
The woman used to be resuscitated for just about 40 minutes. “The passengers on board had been interestingly looking at us looking to revive the patient; some of them praying for her too. It worked. We managed to keep her from choking to dying with the limited method — lack of equipment like a laryngoscope to inspect the throat, sufficient normal saline and oxygen mask — until the time emergency landing could be made,” the physician couple said. Their successful try used to be celebrated via the passengers and even the flight team who proficient them a bottle of top class champagne. “We did our job as doctors. There’s not anything peculiar about it,” they said.
Delhi docs save life of 78-yr-old on AI flight
Reviewed by Kailash
on
June 01, 2018
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