Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
I’m 5’2″ — And I’m Seriously Impressed by Quince’s Petite-Friendly Summer Dresses

I’m 5’2″ — And I’m Seriously Impressed by Quince’s Petite-Friendly Summer Dresses

May 31, 2026
How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball: Start time, livestream

How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball: Start time, livestream

May 31, 2026
Mamdani spin doctor accused of threatening Graham Platner’s ex-staffer before she blew whistle on sexting scandal

Mamdani spin doctor accused of threatening Graham Platner’s ex-staffer before she blew whistle on sexting scandal

May 31, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • I’m 5’2″ — And I’m Seriously Impressed by Quince’s Petite-Friendly Summer Dresses
  • How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball: Start time, livestream
  • Mamdani spin doctor accused of threatening Graham Platner’s ex-staffer before she blew whistle on sexting scandal
  • NFL news: Trump gushes over Giants’ Jaxson Dart amid event introduction backlash
  • Kate Middleton’s Classy White Linen Shorts Are the Anti-Denim Trend Taking Over Summer
  • Sun sign Hailey Van Lith to developmental contract just days after cutting her in bizarre saga
  • Scott Bessent says it’s ‘fitting’ to put Trump’s face on $250 bill: ‘Great celebratory note’
  • Max Domi’s NHL career in doubt after back surgery complications, report says
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Doctors partially delivered a baby at 25 weeks to perform a lifesaving surgery and then returned him to the womb
Doctors partially delivered a baby at 25 weeks to perform a lifesaving surgery and then returned him to the womb
Science

Doctors partially delivered a baby at 25 weeks to perform a lifesaving surgery and then returned him to the womb

News RoomBy News RoomApril 30, 20264 ViewsNo Comments

Doctors had little hope for a fetus with a fatal lung condition, but at his parents’ urging, they performed an unprecedentedly early operation during which they partially removed him from the womb.

The procedure saved the child’s life — baby Cassian was born in August 2025 and is still doing well. The doctors hope the same approach will save others in the future.

The diagnosis came during a second-trimester ultrasound at Orlando Health Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies in Florida. The scan revealed overinflated lungs and a compressed heart — signs of a dangerous condition called congenital high airway obstruction syndrome (CHAOS).


You may like

Normally, developing lungs make secretions that travel up the windpipe and are swallowed. In CHAOS, a blockage in the windpipe stops the secretions from traveling up and out of the lungs, causing the organs to swell and compress the heart.

CHAOS affects just 1 in 50,000 pregnancies, and without treatment, the condition is fatal.

“Due to the relative infrequency of the condition, there is not a single, well-established standard of care for treatment,” Dr. Cole Greves, one of Cassian’s surgeons, told Live Science in an email. “Many cases must be individualized to the unique circumstances of the maternal and fetal patients.”

A risky strategy

A scope revealed that the blockage in Cassian’s widepipe was a 0.2-inch-thick (5 millimeters) membrane, which was too large to puncture using a minimally invasive laser probe.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Doctors have a method for safely delivering babies with these types of airway obstructions. Ideally, they wait until weeks 37 to 39 of pregnancy before using a variant of a cesarean section that involves delivering the head, neck and shoulders of the fetus first while the lower body remains in the womb. At this point, the baby is effectively half born.

Doctors then insert a catheter to bypass the blockage, drain the fluid and allow the baby to breathe, before clamping the umbilical cord and delivering the baby completely. This procedure, called the ex-utero intrapartum treatment (ExIT), is routinely performed on patients with CHAOS.

However, 1 in 4 fetuses with CHAOS die of heart failure before reaching those final weeks of pregnancy, said Dr. Emanuel Vlastos, another one of Cassian’s fetal surgeons. This scenario seemed probable for Cassian, whose heart couldn’t grow properly under the pressure of his distended lungs.


What to read next

Cassian’s parents urged doctors to try anything they could, leading the medical team to propose a potentially risky operation. At just 25 weeks, they would perform the ExIT, drain Cassian’s lungs of fluid before his heart condition worsened, and place him back in the womb to continue developing.

“When you hear the parents say something to the effect of, ‘Well, we know this may not work out, but if you can learn something and help another child, it’s probably going to be worthwhile’ — that’s a pretty magnanimous thing for a parent to say, knowing their baby may die,” Vlastos said.

Image 1 of 2

(Image credit: Live Science)

Photo of a fetus's head and shoulders being exposed out of a mother's abdomen. Two gloved hands are seen supporting the partially exposed fetus
(Image credit: Orlando Health)

Surgeons lifted the head, neck and shoulders of 25-week-old Cassian out of the amniotic sac so that they could fit a catheter into his windpipe through his neck to drain the fluid buildup in his lungs.


With permission from an ethics committee, the surgeons operated on Cassian and his mother Kieshera at 25 weeks of pregnancy. This involved conducting a C-section to expose Cassian’s head and neck and then inserting a catheter into his windpipe to drain his lung secretions. Then, they returned his upper body into the womb and closed it. The catheter remained, held firmly in place by an inflated balloon in his windpipe, for the remainder of the pregnancy.

Given that the ExIT is typically performed at the time of child birth, this may be the first time doctors inserted a windpipe catheter into a fetus this early in gestation and returned him to the uterus, Greves said.

Balancing two lives

Operating on a fetus requires factoring in the mother’s health, too.

“It is a tightrope walk, sometimes for several hours, while two lives hang in the balance,” Greves said.

In this case, the team used general anesthesia to sedate mother and child, but doctors aren’t sure what effects general anesthesia has on the developing nervous system of a 25-week fetus, Vlastos noted. Some studies suggest anesthesia can disrupt the formation of links between nerve cells and lead to cognitive issues, for example.

But it was imperative to sedate the fetus so he wouldn’t attempt to breathe once exposed to air. “There’s a whole lot of circulatory changes that potentially could happen if the baby tried to breathe,” Vlastos said. And those changes could make it impossible to carry out the rest of the pregnancy.

Fetuses receive oxygen via the placenta rather than by breathing themselves; in the womb, a blood vessel called the ductus arteriosus forces oxygenated blood to bypass the immature lungs and directs it to the rest of the fetal body. “Once kids start to breathe outside of the womb, that vessel begins to slowly close” so that blood can travel to the lungs to pick up oxygen, Vlastos said. The doctors would not have been able to return Cassian to the womb if he had begun breathing.

They never stopped asking the very important question, “What else could we try?”

Dr. Cole Greves, one of Cassian’s surgeons at Orlando Health Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies

For Cassian’s mother Kieshera, general anesthesia ensured that her uterine muscles relaxed during the procedure. Otherwise, “the baby’s going to erupt” and be delivered early, Vlastos said, as the uterus is prone to contract when incised. What’s more, a surgically opened uterus can expel a lot of blood if it starts contracting, leading to a potentially dangerous hemorrhage for the mother.

Another concern with operating on a preterm fetus is disrupting the delicate process of development. For example, if the balloon that held the catheter in place were underinflated, the catheter could have slid down and put pressure on the windpipe, preventing it from developing, Vlastos said. And if it were overinflated, the balloon could compress the blood vessels draining the head, causing circulatory issues, he added.

Inflating a balloon in the widepipe could pose a number of concerns, Dr. Diana Farmer, a fetal surgeon at the University of California, Davis Health who was not involved in this case, told Live Science in an email.

But “I like to say ‘there’s a lot we can do for a live patient,'” she said. “And the tracheal issues can be dealt with after birth.”

The outcome

At week 31 of pregnancy, six weeks out from the daring surgery, Kieshera’s uterus started contracting and the time came to deliver baby Cassian. Scarring from the earlier surgery may have made her more likely to go into labor early.

A team of 30 people assembled at 3 a.m. to perform an ExIT, as had been planned, Vlastos said.

The team exposed Cassian’s head and neck and swapped the fluid-draining catheter in the windpipe for an intubation tube to help the newborn breathe. He was born relatively healthy, although he needed to remain in the hospital for a few months due to being born prematurely.

Today, Cassian remains on a ventilator but is being weaned off respiratory support. When he’s older, he’ll require surgery to clear the obstruction in his windpipe and allow his breathing tube to be removed for good.

Cassian’s story shows that this early intervention can work, fostering hope for other CHAOS cases.

“This work would best be carried out in the context of a clinical trial with rigorous data collected on the development impacts of the lung and tracheal growth,” Farmer said. “But these are difficult to accomplish in rare diseases.”

Vlastos said fetal surgeons, globally, should come together to discuss whether they have performed similar operations and to think of new strategies to improve the surgery. For instance, they could find smaller catheters that are more appropriate for a fetus or develop less invasive approaches to drain the lungs.

Cassian’s surgery may sow the seeds for doctors to perform similar operations in the future, but it would never have happened if it weren’t for the trust of his parents.

“They never stopped asking the very important question, ‘What else could we try?'” Greves said. “I do believe, in the end, this made all the difference.”

This article is for informational purposes only and is not meant to offer medical advice.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

‘We were being bullied in our own home’: How ‘authoritarian’ HOAs are contributing to the insect apocalypse

‘We were being bullied in our own home’: How ‘authoritarian’ HOAs are contributing to the insect apocalypse

Bronze Age 5-year-old’s skull found in Uzbekistan is the oldest known evidence of surgery in Central Asia

Bronze Age 5-year-old’s skull found in Uzbekistan is the oldest known evidence of surgery in Central Asia

‘Astonishing’: James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancient universe

‘Astonishing’: James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancient universe

Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week

Astronomers gaze into the ‘Crystal Ball Nebula’ and see a vision of our dying sun — Space photo of the week

How many generations of humans have there been?

How many generations of humans have there been?

Are some people wired to see ghosts? A psychologist explains what makes paranormal experiences more likely

Are some people wired to see ghosts? A psychologist explains what makes paranormal experiences more likely

Scientists got mouse eyes to perform photosynthesis ‪—‬ and no, they didn’t turn green

Scientists got mouse eyes to perform photosynthesis ‪—‬ and no, they didn’t turn green

New device could make processors run 1,000 times faster without additional waste heat — scientists say it could reduce data center energy demands

New device could make processors run 1,000 times faster without additional waste heat — scientists say it could reduce data center energy demands

Science news this week: Exploding rocket overshadows NASA’s next steps to the moon, ‘Doomsday Glacier’ faces big loss, quantum computer AI hybrid shows impressive results, and war deepens Iran’s water crisis

Science news this week: Exploding rocket overshadows NASA’s next steps to the moon, ‘Doomsday Glacier’ faces big loss, quantum computer AI hybrid shows impressive results, and war deepens Iran’s water crisis

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball: Start time, livestream

How to watch Cubs vs. Cardinals on Sunday Night Baseball: Start time, livestream

May 31, 2026
Mamdani spin doctor accused of threatening Graham Platner’s ex-staffer before she blew whistle on sexting scandal

Mamdani spin doctor accused of threatening Graham Platner’s ex-staffer before she blew whistle on sexting scandal

May 31, 2026
NFL news: Trump gushes over Giants’ Jaxson Dart amid event introduction backlash

NFL news: Trump gushes over Giants’ Jaxson Dart amid event introduction backlash

May 31, 2026
Kate Middleton’s Classy White Linen Shorts Are the Anti-Denim Trend Taking Over Summer

Kate Middleton’s Classy White Linen Shorts Are the Anti-Denim Trend Taking Over Summer

May 31, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Sun sign Hailey Van Lith to developmental contract just days after cutting her in bizarre saga

Sun sign Hailey Van Lith to developmental contract just days after cutting her in bizarre saga

May 31, 2026
Scott Bessent says it’s ‘fitting’ to put Trump’s face on 0 bill: ‘Great celebratory note’

Scott Bessent says it’s ‘fitting’ to put Trump’s face on $250 bill: ‘Great celebratory note’

May 31, 2026
Max Domi’s NHL career in doubt after back surgery complications, report says

Max Domi’s NHL career in doubt after back surgery complications, report says

May 31, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.