City
Epaper

Combating COVID-19: Patient treated with plasma therapy in Delhi recovers, discharged

By ANI | Updated: April 27, 2020 11:51 IST

The first patient, who was administered convalescent plasma therapy on compassionate grounds at Max Hospital in Saket, has now fully recovered and was discharged on Sunday.

Open in App

The first patient, who was administered convalescent plasma therapy on compassionate grounds at Max Hospital in Saket, has now fully recovered and was discharged on Sunday.

 

Dr Sangeeta told : "It is an encouraging news for India. He was finally discharged today. He will be in home quarantine for another two weeks as per the government norm."

The 49-year-old critically ill patient was administered fresh plasma as a treatment modality as a side-line to standard treatment protocols on the night of April 14.

The 49-year-old male patient from Delhi had tested COVID-19 positive on April 4 and was admitted at the COVID facility at the hospital with moderate symptoms and a history of fever and respiratory issues.

His condition deteriorated during the next few days and he soon required external oxygen to maintain saturation. He soon developed pneumonia with Type I respiratory failure and had to be put on ventilator support on April 8.

When the patient showed no improvement in his condition, his family requested the hospital for the administration of plasma therapy on the compassionate grounds, a first of its kind treatment modality that was used for this disease in India.

The family came forward to arrange a donor for extracting plasma. The donor had recovered from the infection -- confirmed by two consecutive negative reports -- three weeks before her donation and again tested COVID-19 negative at the time of donation along with other standard tests to rule out infections like Hep B, Hep C and HIV.

According to Max Hospital doctors, a single donor can donate 400 ml of plasma, which can save two lives, as 200 ml is sufficient to treat one patient.

After receiving the treatment, the patient showed progressive improvement and by the fourth day was weaned off ventilator support on the morning of April 18 and continued on supplementary oxygen.

He had started taking the oral feeds in 24-hour after being off ventilator support. He was shifted to a room with round-the-clock monitoring on Monday after testing negative twice within 24 hours, said the Max Hospital doctor.

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: delhiindiaMax Hospitalbreak coronavirus
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalMcDonald's, KFC May Soon Open At Major Stations Like Mumbai, Delhi, and Ahmedabad

NationalDelhi Red Fort Car Blast: Amir Rashid Ali Placed Under 10-Day NIA Custody by Court

EntertainmentShehnaaz Gill Reacts to Delhi Red Fort Car Blast: “Praying for Peace and Strength to Everyone Affected”

NationalDelhi: Loud Explosion Heard Near Radisson Hotel in Mahipalpur, Nothing Suspicious Found

NationalDelhi Red Fort Car Blast: DNA Test Confirms Dr Umar Un Nabi Was Suicide Bomber Driving i20 Car; Planning to Attack Ayodhya

National Realted Stories

NationalPrime Minister-Chief Minister meet should not be viewed politically: Karnataka BJP MLC Ravi

NationalPast statements ‘expose’ TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee’s penchant for controversies

NationalKuki-Zo legislators deny mulling to join new govt in Manipur

NationalSIR 2026: Rajasthan leads in digitising enumeration forms

NationalNagaland signs agreement with British Council to make UK country partner in Hornbill festival