Rare heart surgery saves pregnant Hong Kong mother and twins from ‘ticking time bomb’
Medical team defies the odds to complete the city’s first twin pregnancy heart surgery in more than two decades

A Hong Kong medical team have successfully saved a pregnant woman with twins suffering from an “extremely rare” and potentially fatal heart condition – the city’s first such case in more than 20 years.
The challenging surgery on the pregnant patient, who was diagnosed with aortic dissection, was performed in June last year.
The medical team completed the operation in under five hours to minimise risk for the patient, significantly shorter than the usual eight to 10 hours, according to doctors from the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Prince of Wales Hospital on Wednesday.
Tiffany Chen, who was 25 weeks pregnant, was admitted to hospital after experiencing chest pain and difficulty breathing.
She was diagnosed with aortic dissection, a fatal condition described by gynaecologist Liona Poon Chiu-yee as a “ticking time bomb” inside the body, which can rapidly deteriorate in minutes or even seconds.
Poon said that aortic dissection was a rare but life-threatening heart condition where a tear occurred in the aorta’s inner layer, allowing blood to flood the tear and potentially cause it to rupture.