Doctor Saves Life of Baby With Deadly Brain Aneurysm Using Superglue

International   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Jun 11, 2013   |   3:21PM   |   London, England

Every once in awhile comes a story that seems to be ripped right from the script of a movie nighttime television drama. But real life was more exciting than fiction for one family and their little girl.

As the Washington Times reports, an innovative doctor was able to save the life of a 20-day-old girl with a deadly aneurysm thanks to a usage of surgical superglue the manufacturer probably never expected.

From the story:

Ashlyn Julian was born May 16. The girl began crying and screaming and spitting up constantly, and mother Gina Julian rushed her to Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Kan., the Daily Mail reported.

Doctors found an almond-sized aneurysm in her brain — a very rare diagnosis for infants. And they were stumped on the treatment. There were no tools designed to remove it or treat the aneurysm in patients so small.

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So Dr. Koji Ebersole, an endovascular neurosurgeon, took a chance: He decided to close the aneurysm with surgical superglue. He took a tiny, hair-thin catheter and entered through the baby’s neck to deposit the glue on the area of treatment on the brain, the Daily Mail said.

And then the waiting game began — with positive results.

Within 24 hours, the baby was doing well, doctors said in the Daily Mail.

“I did not know that she’d be ready that fast,” Dr. Ebersole said in the report.

The parents are expected to take their daughter home in the next week or so.