Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Benjamin Roberts-Haslam & Flora Byatt

Baby boy hospitalised for weeks after catching common cold

At just three weeks old, a baby boy had to undergo open-heart surgery after he was born with a congenital heart defect.

Little Tommy Armitage was born with Tetralogy of Fallot, which affects normal blood flow through the heart. Tommy, who was born December 2019 in Oldham Hospital went to St Marys in Manchester and was then rushed to Alder Hey where he underwent open-heart surgery to insert a stent [tiny mental mesh that works to keep an artery from closing or narrowing] in his heart, reports the Liverpool Echo.

Sadly, just two months later Tommy had to undergo more surgery, and it was discovered that some of his heart was "knackered."

Mum Beckie, a student nurse, said: "He was diagnosed with Tetralogy of Fallot when I was 18 weeks pregnant. We were told he would have an operation between six and nine months and that would be it.

"When he was born it was a lot more complicated. They didn't know how bad it was until he was born. He was born in Oldham, then taken to St Mary's in Manchester but the consultant then spoke to Alder Hey because they won't do the surgery anywhere else. We then went to Alder Hey to have his first surgery.

"He had his stent in January. At the time we thought it might buy him some time and he might not even need his other surgery until he's 12 months but it didn't work.

"He was kept in hospital until March when he had another surgery. There are four major things that are wrong with the heart and when they opened him up they found that his coronary arteries were wrong, and his pulmonary artery was knackered.

"He had to have like a pipe to replace his pulmonary artery which will now need changing every few years as he gets older. He'll be going back to Alder Hey each time for three or four weeks at a time for open-heart surgery."

Tommy, now two, is constantly observed, and can end up in hospital for something as simple as the common cold, as they found out in November 2021.

Anthony and Beckie Armitage with their children Tommy, two, Emily, six and Cody, nine (Beckie Armitage)

The 28-year-old mum-of-three said: "He picked up a cold in a waiting room when we were sat next to a child who was full of cold and a couple of days later Tommy was really ill.

"We went to the hospital because he was struggling with breathing, his heart rate was through the roof, and his oxygen saturation was really low all because there was so much pressure on his heart. He was admitted and monitored and they said it was because of a common cold and he just took it so badly."

Beckie has known her best friend Maria Cameron since they were both 11, and she is now raising money for the Ronald McDonald House Charity, which allows families to stay close to hospitals if their children are spending time there. Tommy has long stays at Alder Hey.

Maria is taking part in a White Collar boxing match on May 29 with all the money raised through her GoFundMe going to charity.

The 29-year-old said: "It's not nice seeing your friend going through something that you're helpless with. You can't do anything to help the situation, all you can do is try and be positive. We try and do fun things and have days out with the girls to take her mind off things.

"She's helpless as well and it's her child. It's not nice but you have to support them as much as you can."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.