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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Harriet Whitehead & Joseph Wilkes

Incredible courage of baby girl who had stroke in womb and lost arms

A baby girl is still smiling after suffering a stroke in the womb, losing her fingers in the bath and having to undergo multiple operations to remove her limbs.

Fighter Darcie-May Ferris has already had six operations to remove her hands and arms - and she's only four-months-old.

Her limbs turned black and began rotting after blood clots in her shoulder saw her suffer a stroke in the womb before she was even born.

Darcie has suffered so much in her little life but somehow the brave tot is still smiling through it all - and her parents are determined she grow up to be proud of who she is.

Dad Alex said: “Darcie is the most amazing little girl with a beautiful smile. She’s developing a little personality now. She knows what she wants and behaves like a little diva.

Her doting parents are determined she grow up proud of who she is (PA Real Life)

“Her big sisters adore her, and are not fazed by her hands and arms at all. It’s nice that she has them to look out for her, but I think with what she’s gone through, she’s going to have a really thick skin and be able to hold her own.”

Prison officer Alex Ferris, 26, and accounts manager mum Amy Cawley, 27, of Verwood, Dorset, feared their girl would not survive the pregnancy after the blood clots caused a stroke in the right side of her brain.

But despite her rocky start – which included spending the first six weeks of her life in hospital – Darcie’s future is looking bright, according to her parents, who are fundraising to help pay for her ongoing care.

Alex, who also has a four-year-old daughter from a previous relationship, said: “Darcie has gone through so much in her little life, and we realise every day how lucky we are that she’s here.

The brave baby is still smiling through it all (PA Real Life)

“I know she will not know any different as she will grow up without her arms and hands, but she will realise she is different to other children and it will be up to us as her parents to help her feel comfortable and be proud of who she is.”

Amy, who has another daughter from a previous relationship, Summer, eight, explained that her pregnancy with Darcie was straightforward until, at 24 weeks, she realised she had not been feeling as much movement as she should.

She was monitored with extra scans at Poole Hospital, Dorset, which revealed that Darcie was small for her age, however medics did not seem especially worried at this stage.

Then, at 34 weeks, she became concerned when she had not felt her baby move for three days.

Racing to the maternity unit at Poole Hospital, she had an ultrasound scan, which showed Darcie’s heart rate was very low.

Her limbs turned a horrible black (PA Real Life)

Amy recalled: “They said they were going to deliver her then and there by caesarean section.

“I called Alex’s work and he rushed over. By the time he got there I was in surgery.”

Amy added: “They told me afterwards if they had waited another 48 hours, Darcie wouldn’t have made it. It was so scary to think how close we’d come to losing her.”

As soon as Darcie was born on 9 December last year, weighing 4lb 7oz, medics noticed that both her arms were discoloured and covered in black birthmark-like lesions.

Before either of her parents could hold her, she was whisked to neonatal intensive care.

Alex added: “The atmosphere in the room after she was delivered was very strange. They told us her arms didn’t look normal.”

Her parents didn't think she would make it (PA Real Life)

Around seven hours later, the couple finally got to see their little girl.

Alex continued: “She appeared to have these lesions on her arm, which at first we thought were birthmarks or a skin condition.”

He explained: “I had been so excited about having a baby but when we got to see her, I couldn’t believe it – her arms were purple and black.

“We were both scared. When we saw them we didn’t know how to feel or have a clue what it was.”

Next, Darcie was transferred to Southampton General Hospital, in Hampshire, where specialist staff were equipped to deal with burns and skin grafts.

There, she underwent an MRI to see if there was an explanation as to what was causing her condition.

All of Darcie-May's limbs have been removed (PA Real Life)

Shockingly, the scan showed she had suffered a stroke in the womb on the right side of her brain, caused by a blood clot in her shoulder that had travelled up.

Amy said: “We don’t know why it happened or whether it could happen again if Darcie has a baby sister or brother.”

“I had my placenta tested to see if it could be a genetic problem, but the tests did not come back with anything,” continued Amy.

“Darcie was very heavily sedated for the first 10 days of her life, so she was not in pain, but she was in an incubator which made it really difficult because we couldn’t hold her.

“We couldn’t cuddle her until she was eight days old which was so hard. We wanted desperately to bond with her, but not being able to touch her made it more difficult.”

In neonatal intensive care, Darcie was placed on medication to try and thin her blood and break up the clots in her shoulder.

At first, the treatment appeared to be working, and her left arm started to go back to its normal colour a couple of weeks after she was born – although it was too late for the fingers on her left hand.

She still has the 'biggest, brightest smile' (PA Real Life)

Alex explained: “Her thumb and index finger on her left hand were okay, but she had three black fingers, and it became clear they were not going to last.”

“We had to let them fall off. In fact, we were bathing her one day and a couple of her fingers just fell off. We had been expecting it to happen, but it was horrible, and we didn’t really know how to deal with it,” Alex recalled.

“Her fingers looked like little sultanas.

“Her first operation was to have those tidied up when she was six weeks old.  The skin had come away and left the bone, so the surgeon had to trim the bone back to allow the skin to heal over it.”

Then, the focus turned to Darcie’s right arm, which did not appear to be healing as well as the left.

“It wasn’t clear what the best option would be – either to amputate or to play the waiting game and see if it healed itself, because a baby’s skin has a better ability to heal than an adult’s,” Alex said.

“The surgeons decided to leave it a bit longer, but it was awful because her skin was a greeny-grey colour. The skin had gone necrotic, which is where the tissue and cells start to die, and smelled really bad.”

Darcie is developing a personality (PA Real Life)

Alex added: “It was worse towards the hand and we’d have to keep dressing it.”

Having spent Christmas and New Year in hospital, Amy and Alex were delighted to finally bring Darcie home in January.

Back home, they continued to change her dressings every day, and returned to hospital for weekly appointments, where doctors monitored Darcie’s progress, and carried out gradual amputations on her right arm.

“The worst thing was if she was going to have an amputation, she would have to fast from 2am the day before and she didn’t understand that, obviously,” said Amy. “She just knew she was hungry and not getting fed.

“We did that for four weeks, and they were gradually making her right arm shorter. The fingers on her right hand had been dead for so long that they fused into her palm, so it was like one big block of dead skin.”

Now, after a total of six operations, Darcie has just her thumb and index finger on her left hand, and her right arm has been amputated from the forearm.

She will require further operations on her right arm, until the deteriorated skin is all gone and only healthy tissue remains, and she will also need skin grafts in the future.

Alex said surgeons resisted removing her whole arm in one go, because they were hopeful that the skin would heal itself, and wanted to give her as much length as possible.

Then, her parents will focus on physiotherapy. To help with the costs of her ongoing care, they have set up a GoFundMe, which has raised almost £5,000 from friends, family and strangers.

Despite all she has faced, Darcie is a bright, bubbly baby who is adored by her parents and siblings.

Alex said: “There are a lot of unknowns at the moment. We don’t know how much movement she will have in her arms, or whether it will affect her ability to crawl.

“We also don’t know what the impact the stroke will have had until she starts to develop and to learn, so now we’re trying to fundraise via  GoFundMe  to help her lead as normal a life as possible.”

Alex added: “We want to give her the option to have prosthetic limbs when she’s a bit older. The NHS prosthetics are very basic, but there are some amazing prosthetics out there which have grip and movement.

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