Kathmandu, Feb 9: One percent of the children have congenital heart disease, said Dr Urmila Shakya, senior pediatric cardiologist at the Sahid Gangalal National Heart Centre here. She gave out this information while addressing a news conference the Centre organised Thursday in connection with the Congenital Heart Disease Awareness Week.
According to Dr Shakya, eight to 10
children out of 1,000 children born alive are found suffering from congenital
heart conditions. She shared that this condition develops when the child is
still in the womb due to some problem with the artery outside the heart or
abnormalities in the interior parts of the heart.
Dr Shakya said that mortality rate
is high due to cardiac-related issues among the children who have complicated
congenital heart condition. To reduce such risk, Dr Shakya advised, pregnant
women should pay attention to proper food intake and nutrition and totally
abstain from smoking.
It is said symptoms about
congenital heart condition can be seen in nearly two-thirds of the children
within a month of their birth, and one-third of children showing such symptoms
died within some days of their birth if timely medical treatment is not
provided.
Dr Shakya also said that the causes
can be identified only in 10 percent cardiac diseases. It is said children with
congenital heart conditions do not gain weight as per their age, are weak, the
left part of their chest is raised and suffer from chest pain, fall
unconscious, and have body swelling, among other problems. (RSS)