British
pilot in Vietnam no longer needs lung transplant
01:45
After getting unplugged of ventilator, the British
patient had the tracheotomy tube removed and could breathe himself.
A British
pilot, the most critical Covid-19 patient in Vietnam, will not need a lung
transplant as he now can breathe unaided, VnExpress quoted Luong Ngoc Khue,
director of the Ministry of Health’s Medical Examination and Treatment
Department, as saying.
Khue said
the patient’s lungs are no longer infected and can breathe on his own, the
muscles in his arms and legs are recovering well.
The Briton
is fully conscious and capable of coherent verbal communication. "At
this stage, a lung transplant is no longer necessary," Khue added.
When Khue
wished the patient to stay healthy to be able to soon return to England, the
patient corrected the doctor very quickly, saying his hometown was in
Scotland.
“This shows
that the patient’s reaction was as if he had never been in coma,” Khue said.
The patient
has been talking to his friends in other countries. He confirmed he was all
alone with no siblings and his mother is dead.
The patient
also took a photo with the doctors, holding up a scarf with the word
'Motherwell', which was a gift that his friends sent to him last week.
"Motherwell"
is the name of a football team in his hometown, said the patient.
After
getting rid of the ventilator, the patient had the tracheotomy tube removed
and could breathe himself, Khue said.
Khue
stressed that the Briton needs physical therapy and strict infection control
as re-infection would be very dangerous for him.
Identified
as Patient 91 in Vietnam, the British pilot tested positive for Covid-19 on
March 18 and has had 90 days of treatment, the longest period for any
Covid-19 patient in Vietnam.
In May,
Vietnam health ministry considered a lung transplant for the British pilot as
his condition at the time was much more severe. Computed tomography scan
results showed that fibrosis had solidified most of his lungs, and he
constantly relied on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) to stay
alive.
The country
has recorded 335 Covid-19 cases so far, with only ten active infections left
and no deaths. It has gone 63 days without community transmission. Hanoitimes
VNN
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Thứ Năm, 18 tháng 6, 2020
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