- Terrence Nyahwa, from Orpingdon, had been experiencing heart pains
- Hospital tests revealed he had a benign heart tumour
- Operation would have required cutting open breastbone
- Terrence would never have been able to play rugby again
- Instead doctors made two cuts and used a wire device to remove growth
17:09 EST, 29 March 2014
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17:10 EST, 29 March 2014
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A rugby-playing schoolboy has become the youngest person in the UK to have keyhole surgery to remove a growth in his heart.Â
Until now, such an operation would involve cutting into the breastbone, a traumatic procedure taking months to heal. It leaves the operation site delicate – which rules out a return to high-impact sports like rugby.
Instead, doctors made just two small cuts and used a tiny wire- cage device to remove the growth from 17-year-old Terrence Nyahwa’s heart.
Rugby-loving schoolboy Terrence Nyahwa from Orpingdon, Bromley, has become the youngest person in the UK to have keyhole surgery on a heart tumour
Cardiac tumours are a high-risk because fragments can break off and travel through the body.
If they reach the brain or lungs, this can trigger a stroke or heart failure. The keyhole operation also meant a shorter recovery time, less risk of infection and no inches-long scar.
Ranjit Deshpande, who led the team which performed Terrence’s operation at King’s College Hospital in Camberwell, South London, explained: ‘We not only kept Terrence alive but also his dreams of playing rugby.
‘Without this new approach, Terrence would never have been able to go on the pitch again and that has a huge psychological impact when you’re so young.’
Ranjit Deshpande, who led the team which performed the operation at King’s College Hospital, explained: ‘We not only kept Terrence alive but also his dreams of playing rugby’
Terrence had been suffering chest pains and shortness of breath while playing sport for months.
Hospital tests revealed the benign tumour and he was in the operating theatre just 48 hours later.
First, doctors connected his heart to a bypass machine because surgery on a beating heart is too risky.
Next, the team used a scalpel to make a 0.2in incision between his ribs then inserted a long thin flexible tube with a tiny high-definition camera at one end.
The camera was positioned inside the heart, enabling doctors to get a clear image and assess the tumour close-up.
A second cut was then made in the chest just above the first, and a long scalpel inserted until it reached the right-hand chamber of Terrence’s heart.
No incision was made in the actual heart. Instead, the knife travelled through a natural opening in the heart.
The wire cage, called a ‘snare’, was then inserted through the same hole.
The snare opens like a flower then closes again around a tumour to hold it in place so the tumour doesn’t float away after the surgeon has cut it free. Once detached from the heart, the grape-sized tumour was removed from Terrence’s body in the grip of the snare.
It took just a day for Terrence to be walking again and he was home within a week. In his first game back with his club Old Elthamians RFC, he scored a try and now wants to play rugby professionally.
‘This means so much to me and I feel so lucky to be back on the field again,’ says Terrence from Bromley, South London.
‘Before, I could only play for about ten minutes but now I’ve got my stamina back. And I’ve not got a huge scar on my chest.’
Terrence discovered his heart condition when playing rugby because he was experiencing shortness of breath
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zeb,
dubbas,
2 hours ago
Racheal’s son, all the best
Watson and Holmes,
Baker Street, United Kingdom,
4 hours ago
Congratulations to this young man, a wonderful operation. It is good news for all of us that minimally-invasive surgery is making great strides, since it will improve operations, reduce costs and hopefully be available to all of us, and not just for heart tumors.
pugsey,
brisbane, Australia,
4 hours ago
This is such a touching story the Mail decided to run it twice.
The Equaliser,
Hooverville, Uk,
4 hours ago
Ok young man, let’s see you now play for England and really put an amazing end to this story!
phoebe,
London,
5 hours ago
Good luck to you!
catherine c,
London, United Kingdom,
5 hours ago
Very pleased that the surgery was a success for this young man and he can still participate in sports. I do wonder however how the NHS deemed his surgery to be more important than that of the younger children highlighted in a different story. Before I receive red arrows, I do not in any way, shape or form begrudge this young man his surgery. I just want surgery to be available to all young children when it is required.
happypasserby,
Perth, Australia,
1 hour ago
the way it goes,
yes, United Kingdom,
5 hours ago
Glad it worked out well for you son. Well done to all involved.
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