Successful Surgery for Deelan & Special Call for Lifesaving Funding
March 3, 2010 by Jeremy · Leave a Comment
It was all smiles after another successful heart surgery here in Istanbul. Deelan’s surgery was a “total correction” – though he is still in ICU on a treatment of nitric oxide to bring down the pressure in his lungs.
In addition to being a by-product of cigarette smoke and rush hour traffic – not to mention a body building supplement – nitric oxide is used in pediatric intensive care. From the source of all online wisdom, Wikipedia:
The endothelium (inner lining) of blood vessels uses nitric oxide to signal the surrounding smooth muscle to relax, thus resulting in vasodilation and increasing blood flow.
and
Nitric oxide is considered an anti-anginal drug: it causes vasodilation, which can help with ischemic pain known as angina by decreasing the cardiac workload. By dilating the veins there is less blood returned to the heart per cycle. This decreases the amount of volume that the heart has to pump.
Nitric oxide should not be confused with “laughing gas” – or, more officially, nitrous oxide – N2O.
Nitric oxide is also very expensive. In fact, we’ve had to use it already on Muhammed and Baroof. In addition to normal surgery costs (which is essential to repair the CAUSE of pulmonary hypertension), NO can undo the previous effects of the now-repaired cause. To fix the cause and not seek to reverse the effects is to leave the net outcome the same.
We spent $2,000 per child on nitric oxide, for a total of $6,000. As much as the surgery itself, this has really proven to be the stuff that saves lives. So today I’m going to ask that you find a way to give generously to the Lifesaving Nitric Oxide Fund to pay down Muhammed, Baroof, and Deelan’s additional costs and to pave the way for future children who will need this treatment.
![]() Molecule of the Year (1992), Nitric Oxide |
To save lives through the very specific provision of nitric oxide, please contribute your desired amount below. One container of nitric oxide costs us approximately $2,000. |
Follow Deelan on Twitter: @DeelanKameran. Subscribe to Deelan’s updates via RSS HERE. Follow Deelan’s thread of longer stories (with pictures & video) on the PLC blog HERE.






