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At Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at ºÙºÙÊÓƵ, our surgeons specialize in all forms of pediatric general surgery, including procedures to treat children who have congenital abnormalities, cancer, and conditions that affect the digestive system, urinary system, chest wall, and lungs. We also use innovative techniques to make your child feel as comfortable as possible after surgery.
When an infant in the womb is diagnosed with a congenital condition, our doctors provide the surgical care your baby needs after birth. Our involvement begins during pregnancy, when we work with your maternal–fetal medicine specialist and other pediatric experts to create a plan for your baby’s treatment after birth.
Congenital conditions we treat in newborns include the following:
We meet with parents before birth to help you understand your baby’s diagnosis, the recommended treatment plan, and what you can expect after delivery and after your baby’s surgery. We answer your questions and provide the support you need throughout your baby’s treatment and recovery.
When the colon, anus, and rectum do not connect or develop properly, surgical repair is needed to ensure that stool can move out of the body. Two common conditions we treat are anal atresia, also knowns as imperforate anus, and Hirschsprung disease.
Fecal incontinence, which makes it difficult for your child to control his or her bowel movements, can result from these conditions. Through our bowel management program, our multidisciplinary team helps manage the lifestyle challenges that can occur with fecal incontinence. We provide family-centered treatment plans that teach children how to have controlled bowel movements and recommend medications and surgical treatments as necessary.
Our surgeons have developed innovative approaches to treating congenital and acquired conditions of the chest wall, esophagus, and lungs. This includes Nissen fundoplication, a procedure that reinforces the esophageal sphincter and is used to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and hiatal hernia.
Our surgeons use minimally invasive approaches, including the Nuss procedure, to treat adolescents who have chest wall abnormalities such as pectus excavatum and pectus carinatum, which cause the breastbone to protrude inward or outward, respectively.
In addition, we perform all pediatric general surgery procedures, including the following:
General surgeons provide extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for infants and children who need help breathing. ECMO is a process that performs the work of your child’s heart and lungs—oxygenating blood and then circulating it through the body.
ECMO is used to care for newborns with meconium aspiration, which occurs when fecal matter enters the lungs during childbirth. ECMO is also used for infants who have respiratory distress syndrome, pneumonia, or congenital diaphragmatic hernia, a condition that leaves an opening in the diaphragm, allowing stomach contents to enter the chest.
To learn more about pediatric general surgery at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital, please call 212-263-7391.
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