Samuel Alexander Armas

@basqui (3888)
Philippines
June 3, 2010 8:26pm CST
Have you seen this picture already? A picture began circulating in November. It should be "The Picture of the Year," or perhaps, "Picture of the Decade." It won't be. In fact, unless you obtained a copy of the US paper which published it, you probably would never have seen it. The picture is that of a 21-week-old unborn baby named Samuel Alexander Armas, who is being operated on by surgeon named Joseph Bruner. The baby was diagnosed with spina bifida and would not survive if removed from his mother's womb. Little Samuel's mother, Julie Armas, is an obstetrics nurse in Atlanta . She knew of Dr. Bruner's remarkable surgical procedure. Practicing at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville , he performs these special operations while the baby is still in the womb. During the procedure, the doctor removes the uterus via C-section and makes a small incision to operate on the baby. As Dr. Bruner completed the surgery on Samuel, the little guy reached his tiny, but fully developed hand through the incision and firmly grasped the surgeon's finger. Dr. Bruner was reported as saying that when his finger was grasped, it was the most emotional moment of his life, and that for an instant during the procedure he was just frozen, totally immobile. The photograph captures this amazing event with perfect clarity. The editors titled the picture, "Hand of Hope." The text explaining the picture begins, "The tiny hand of 21-week-old fetus Samuel Alexander Armas emerges from the mother's uterus to grasp the finger of Dr. Joseph Bruner as if thanking the doctor for the gift of life." Little Samuel's mother said they "wept for days" when they saw the picture. She said, "The photo reminds us pregnancy isn't about disability or an illness, it's about a little person." Samuel was born in perfect health, the operation 100 percent successful.
2 people like this
6 responses
@SomeCowgirl (32189)
• United States
4 Jun 10
What a beautiful and miraculous story. Sad to say that not every mother would be given the chance to have the baby operated on in that manner, to save it's life. In a way I am glad to hear that things like that are available, but also in a way I feel it's messing with God's Will.
1 person likes this
@SomeCowgirl (32189)
• United States
4 Jun 10
I suppose it's true that it could've been God's Will to prolong the baby's life, I guess we'll never know what the reason was for the doctor being there, and saving the baby, and it's mother.
@basqui (3888)
• Philippines
4 Jun 10
Aren't we thankful that there are wonderful people everywhere that could save lives...
@dragon54u (31633)
• United States
4 Jun 10
Cowgirl, if God never challenged us we would never have come as far as we have in medicine or anything else. He didn't afflict Samuel with a disease to punish anyone, I believe He does things like this to challenge our inventiveness, to make us use our brains and also possibly to show abortion advocates that the baby is indeed a little person in there. If this picture circulated widely with the story, how many abortions do you think it would prevent? So you see, God's will is sometimes hard to fathom but it is always meant for the best when you see how much good came out of Samuel's affliction. That's my view.
@dragon54u (31633)
• United States
4 Jun 10
Was the poor thing awake?! I don't doubt that at 21 weeks there is a tiny hand that could consciously grasp a doctor's finger but however miraculous this story is I'm left wondering in horror how in the world the baby could be awake just as the doctor finished the surgery. Babies in the womb feel pain like anyone else. But--maybe it was a local? I know this surgery is done successfully when it is needed. What a miracle! And to think that Planned Parenthood and other organizations would have us believe that our babies at this age are just a mass of cells "like a cancer" as they sometimes put it.
@dragon54u (31633)
• United States
4 Jun 10
They usually leave the uterus in the mother so that the baby keeps getting blood, nutrients and oxygen. I think that the author of this story misinterpreted a lot of medical facts but I don't doubt the main point of the story.
@basqui (3888)
• Philippines
4 Jun 10
It said that the baby lived and was delivered successfully months after the surgery. The baby's action was surely something uncommon, and isn't it that when the uterus is opened the baby will die ?
1 person likes this
@AmbiePam (120641)
• United States
4 Jun 10
Sad how people dimiss a fetus as something less than a human being. I'm so glad that these people cared enough to act.
@dawnald (85137)
• Shingle Springs, California
4 Jun 10
Wow - that is pretty incredible.
@mimiang (3760)
• Philippines
4 Jun 10
That is one of the things we might have in our country-- fetal surgery. I just hope that many will be courageous enough to train for that. It is quite an adventurous kind of specialty. Perhaps, a scholarship would help the many surgeons because life in our country is really hard. Doctors still depend on their parents and relatives for their training. We are given very small amount of financial support by the government even if the postgraduate training might also benefit the country . That is why many just feel frustrated and just become content on being a general practitioner or a generalist who would just ask the Almighty to help their patients gain help for her fate.
@basqui (3888)
• Philippines
4 Jun 10
Fetal surgery is a very delicate operation because it could jeopardize the life of the baby and mother. If surgeons could just specialize abroad and practice here after finishing their studies abroad then maybe our medical life could improve.
• Malaysia
5 Jun 10
wow..i haven't seen the news, but reading the details that you wrote was enough to make me feel a bit emotional that's really good news that you've got there, and great news for the baby and the mother too..