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KNH doctors save a 52-year-old man with spine issue after 20 years in bed

09:58 AM
KNH doctors save a 52-year-old man with spine issue after 20 years in bed

After 20 years confined to a bed, Ibrahim Mungai, 52, is walking again, thanks to groundbreaking care at Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH).

In an X post shared by the KNH on Tuesday, November 11, 2025, the hospital said in 2004, tuberculosis of the spine left him completely immobile, forcing him to confront decades of pain, isolation, and secondary health complications in his Kikuyu, Kiambu County home.

Also Watch: KNH Medical Milestone: Preterm baby born at 400g survives

KNH’s multidisciplinary team took on Ibrahim’s complex case, combining advanced spinal care with intensive rehabilitation.

A screengrab of a post by KNH.PHOTO/@KNH_hospital/X

The hospital highlighted that Ibrahim’s recovery demonstrates the life-changing impact of early intervention, specialized care, and perseverance.

“Even after years of immobility, hope is never lost,” the statement added.

This comes days after the doctors restored a woman’s nose in historic reconstructive surgery.

Ibrahim Mungai.PHOTO/@KNH_hospital/X

For eight long years, 51-year-old Dormitila Yula hid her face from the world. What began as a small pimple on her nose in 2017 spiralled into a painful medical journey.

A string of surgeries, infections, and finally, a cancer diagnosis that left her without part of her nose and stripped away her confidence.

But on September 10, 2025, KNH gave Dormitila a new lease on life through a groundbreaking six-hour procedure, Kenya’s first-ever zygomatic implant-retained nasal prosthesis surgery.

The historic operation marked a major milestone in reconstructive surgery in the country, restoring not just Dormitila’s face, but her dignity and joy.

Today, Dormitila beams with renewed confidence.

“I can finally face the world,” she said. Her story is a powerful reminder of resilience, innovation, transformation, hope, and proof that at KNH,” the hospital posted on its X account on Tuesday, October 28, 2025.

What it involved

The innovative procedure involved a team of specialists from KNH’s Maxillofacial, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Dental, and Oncology units, working together to craft a custom nasal prosthesis anchored by zygomatic implants, titanium fixtures placed in the cheekbones to support a realistic nasal structure.

Specialists at Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) conducted tests and discovered a growth in her nasal passage.

Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) during an operation on Dormitila Yula.PHOTO/@KNH_hospital/X

She underwent reconstructive surgery using skin from her forehead and bone from her rib to rebuild part of her nose.

The procedure offered temporary relief, but a stubborn infection soon developed in her right nostril and eye.

By 2020, the infection had worsened. After further tests, Dormitila was diagnosed with Squamous Cell Carcinoma, a type of skin cancer.

This started a turning point that launched her into years of intense treatment and recovery.

Her care involved two major plastic and vascular surgeries led by doctors Adeline Vilembwa, Benjamin Wabwire, and Loice Kahoro, followed by 33 sessions of radiotherapy and 40 days of hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

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