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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Last chance for survival for baby who swallowed a battery

By Ruth Keber
Bay of Plenty Times·
25 Mar, 2015 11:15 PM4 mins to read

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Devon Hacche swallowed a battery last year.

Devon Hacche swallowed a battery last year.

A baby fighting for life after swallowing a battery is facing his last chance at survival after being operated on more than a dozen times.

Devon Hacche, from Tauranga, severely burned the inside of his throat after swallowing a small button lithium-ion battery last December 15.

Devon's mother, Amanda Hacche, said her boy was at the the lowest point of his recovery.

He has had two major operations each lasting at least six hours in the past fortnight.

"So this is it, the last chance, as there is no further surgical intervention available."

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Ms Hacche told the Bay of Plenty Times surgeons had removed Devon's oesophagus, put a saliva collection drain into his neck and closed the opening in his stomach, she said. He is being fed through a stomach tube. Doctors will consider how to repair his trachea in a year.

Read more: Battery inflicts horror injury on Tauranga infant
Family buoyed by community support
Baby Devon Hacche's condition deteriorates

Devon, who will turn 1 on April 12, was a fighter and Ms Hacche was holding on to hope even though doctors had not given any indications on whether he would live through his ordeal. He had suffered seizures, brain bleeds and infections.

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Amanda Hacche, from Mount Maunganui, pictured with her son before he was admitted to Starship hospital in December last year. Photo / Supplied
Amanda Hacche, from Mount Maunganui, pictured with her son before he was admitted to Starship hospital in December last year. Photo / Supplied

"He's definitely a little soldier, he doesn't give up. He's been through what I consider some hugely stacked odds against him and he keeps going," she said.

"It's a miracle. He's probably more sick now than when he first came in as his lungs have just taken a real hammering with aspiration pneumonia, (where contents of his stomach goes into his lungs).

"There have been times where I have thought it was the end and I would be saying goodbye to him. He was spiking to huge temperatures of 40.4C, we didn't know if there were any more options for him. This round of surgeries, he has lost all of his oesophagus and we are not sure whether his trachea will heal enough for him to breathe independently - but we have to keep hoping," she said.

"It has definitely been horrendous beyond words. While there has been some really bright light moments where we have had some really positive things happen and he's getting better. There has also been some incredible low days which are just hideous. It's not something I would wish on my worst enemy."

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New Zealand

Family buoyed by community support

14 Feb 11:29 PM

Baby Devon Hacche's condition deteriorates

17 Feb 01:46 AM

Funds raised for Devon

10 May 06:44 PM

Being in intensive care for over three months was "horrific", she said.

"In the last two weeks three families we had been pretty close with have lost babies. Hard is not really the right word, it's horrific. How do I explain to a six year old (Devon's sister Mikayla), yes that baby is there and now he is not. It's terrifying, because next time it could be my turn.

"You cry because you are scared and then you will cry because you're happy because he will do something amazing. When he was really sick and going into this last operation, he put both his hands up and touched my face, he was smiling and beaming but his eyes were incredibly sad and were teary. He was in heaps of pain. But he was trying to pull me closer - it's little things like that that make me think it will all be okay."

"Devon is still fragile and we have a long way to go. It's quite possible at this point we will have to seek answers and further surgical options in the United States or on the United Kingdom.

"But he's the strongest person I've ever met... I don't know anyone else who could go through what he's gone through and still smile."

To support baby Devon's recovery click here:

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