Heart Second Opinion Leads to 'Miracle' Diagnosis for Collins, Provides Answers and Coordinated Care
Collins Hawkins’ parents sought a second opinion when their daughter was diagnosed with a heart defect before birth. That second opinion later led them to genetic testing—and answers for Collins, who is now a happy 3-year-old girl who loves going to school and playing with her friends.
When she was 24 weeks pregnant with her first child, Taylor Hawkins received news that no mother wants to hear: Her baby girl had a heart defect. Not only that, but her baby would need heart surgery just days after she was born.
Taylor and her husband, Daniel, live in Louisville, but they decided to get a second opinion at the Cincinnati Children’s Heart Institute. They were relieved to learn that heart surgery could wait.
“We were debating having our baby at Cincinnati Children’s if she was going to need surgery right after birth, but because we could wait, we were able to have her in Louisville near our family,” Taylor said.
Collins was born in August 2019. Three days later, however, she began spitting up frequently and stopped having bowel movements. She was rushed to the operating room. Taylor and Daniel were told Collins had a perforation in her bowel and needed eight inches of her small intestine removed.
Finding a Connection
After Collins recovered from surgery, Taylor and Daniel took her to a pediatric cardiologist at a local hospital where an echocardiogram showed a heart murmur and other abnormalities. That’s when they sought out Bradley Keller, MD, medical director of the Cincinnati Children’s Greater Louisville and Western Kentucky heart practice.
“We knew she’d had part of her intestine removed, and we knew she had heart issues, but we didn’t know if there was a correlation,” Taylor said. “In the NICU, she’d tested negative for everything.”