Lake Annabelle Hall wouldn't be alive today if doctors at Children's Hospital of Colorado hadn't operated on a cyst on her left lung before she was born.
Doctors pulled her halfway out of her mother's womb, leaving her connected to her umbilical cord and placenta, which served as life support for her while a team of 43 doctors and nurses operated on her.
She is now 5-months-old after the medical procedure for a rare condition that saved her life.
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All smiles: Lake Annabelle Hall is seen cradled in Dr. Timothy Crombleholme's arms around both her parents after undergoing the rare pre-birth surgery, done only a handful of times per year at major hospitals
Mother's arms: Savannah Perry holds her daughter, Lake, as her fiancee Erik Hall watches during an office visit at Children's Hospital in Aurora, Colorado on Thursday
Dr. Timothy Crombleholme performed the surgery just before Lake's birth Nov. 6, and last week, Lake's parents got the all clear from Crombleholme.
'No more surgeries,' said Lake's mother, Savannah Perry of Lafayette, Colorado.
'Lake is a normal, healthy, young baby girl just like any other baby born without any issues,' added Lake's father, Erik Hall.
Pioneered in the 1980s, the so-called 'exit procedure' and other pre-birth surgeries used to be done only a handful of times per year at major hospitals.
Now, specialty centers such as the Colorado Fetal Care Center at Children's Hospital perform pre-birth surgery dozens of times a year.
All clear! The family received the all clear from Dr Timothy Crombleholme, right, following a so-called exit procedure where doctors operated on Lake to remove a lung cyst while she was still attached to the umbilical cord
Discovery: The cyst is seen in the very center of this xray, shaped like a small white tear drop
In Lake's case, Perry's doctor discovered an abnormality during a routine 20-week visit during her pregnancy. Crombleholme examined Perry and soon realized that it was a lung cyst that would keep her from breathing as soon as Lake was born.
'You could push air in, but it wouldn't come out,' Crombleholme said. 'She wouldn't make it out of the delivery room.'
Crombleholme decided to wait until after 30 weeks of pregnancy to attempt the surgery to remove the cyst and clear Lake's airway right before birth. Lake's left lung had grown larger than the other as fluid became trapped inside.
Crombleholme assembled a group for the operation to remove the cyst that included teams of doctors and nurses with specialized roles — a team for Perry who would undergo a cesarean operation, a team for Lake while still inside the womb, a team for Lake while Crombleholme operated on her outside the womb, and a team for Lake after her birth.
Limited time: Once a baby is outside its mother's womb, doctors have only about hour to an hour and a half to perform the procedure on the fetus while keeping it connected to the umbilical cord and placenta
Survivor: Lake Annabelle Hall is seen being carried away by a doctor just after undergoing surgery five months ago
Little help: The couple are seen spending some of their first moments with their daughter who used an oxygen tank to breathe through her first four months
Hours of planning and meeting with the group were crucial. Once a baby is outside its mother's womb, doctors have only about hour to an hour and a half to perform the procedure on the fetus.
Once Lake was out of Perry's womb it took Crombleholme nine minutes to remove the cyst and close the gaping incision on her right side. It took another 10 minutes to run a tube down Lake's tiny windpipe to make sure it was clear. Then doctors cut the umbilical cord, marking Lake's official birth.
For her first four months Lake was given oxygen to help her breathe.
On Thursday when Perry and Hall visited the center, Crombleholme told them Lake's chest examinations were normal.
'I'm done,' Crombleholme said as a beaming Perry and Hall held their cooing baby girl.
Doctors pulled her halfway out of her mother's womb, leaving her connected to her the umbilical cord and placenta, which served as life support for her while a team of 43 doctors and nurses operated on her.
She is now 5 months old after the medical procedure for a rare condition that saved her life. Dr. Timothy Crombleholme performed the surgery just before Lake's birth Nov. 6, and last week, Lake's parents got the all clear from Crombleholme.
"No more surgeries," said Lake's mother, Savannah Perry of Lafayette, Colo.
"Lake is a normal, healthy, young baby girl just like any other baby born without any issues," added Lake's father, Erik Hall.
Pioneered in the 1980s, the so-called "exit procedure" and other pre-birth surgeries used to be done only a handful of times per year at major hospitals. Now, specialty centers such as the Colorado Fetal Care Center at Children's Hospital perform pre-birth surgery dozens of times a year.
In Lake's case, Perry's doctor discovered an abnormality during a routine 20-week visit during her pregnancy. Crombleholme examined Perry and soon realized that it was a lung cyst that would keep her from breathing as soon as Lake was born.
"You could push air in, but it wouldn't come out," Crombleholme said. "She wouldn't make it out of the delivery room."
Crombleholme decided to wait until after 30 weeks of pregnancy to attempt the surgery to remove the cyst and clear Lake's airway right before birth. Lake's left lung had grown larger than the other as fluid became trapped inside.
Crombleholme assembled a group for the operation to remove the cyst that included teams of doctors and nurses with specialized roles - a team for Perry who would undergo a cesarean operation, a team for Lake while still inside the womb, a team for Lake while Crombleholme operated on her outside the womb, and a team for Lake after her birth.
Hours of planning and meeting with the group were crucial. Once a baby is outside its mother's womb, doctors have only about hour to an hour and a half to perform the procedure on the fetus.
Once Lake was out of Perry's womb it took Crombleholme nine minutes to remove the cyst and close the gaping incision on her right side. It took another 10 minutes to run a tube down Lake's tiny windpipe to make sure it was clear. Then doctors cut the umbilical cord, marking Lake's official birth.
For her first four months Lake was given oxygen to help her breathe. On Thursday when Perry and Hall visited the center, Crombleholme told them Lake's chest examinations were normal.
"I'm done," Crombleholme said as a beaming Perry and Hall held their cooing baby girl.