Mumbai: 4 Month-Old Bab y Suffers Cardiac Arrest, Doctor Saves Her Life After Heart Stopped Beating.

Mumbai: 4 Month-Old Bab y Suffers Cardiac Arrest, Doctor Saves Her Life After Heart Stopped Beating.

A four-month old baby girl from Mumbai suffered a cardiac arrest and her heart stopped beating, but doctors managed to bring her back to life in a medical miracle.

What happened.

Sudden deterioration: The baby, a resident of Mumbai, was admitted to a city hospital after she became extremely ill. Her condition worsened and she went into cardiac arrest — her heart completely stopped beating.

Emergency response: The medical team immediately started CPR and advanced life support. After intense resuscitation efforts, doctors were able to restart her heart.

Critical hours: Post-resuscitation, the infant was kept on ventilator support in the ICU. Her condition remained critical for several days as doctors monitored her vitals round the clock.

Doctor’s statement.

The treating pediatric cardiologist said: “When the child was brought to us, her condition was very serious. Her heart had stopped. It was a race against time. We did continuous CPR and gave emergency medicines. Luckily, we were able to revive her. Cases like this are extremely rare and survival chances are very low.”

Current condition.

After several days of intensive care, the baby’s condition stabilized. She was gradually weaned off the ventilator and is now recovering. Doctors say she will need long-term follow-up, but her survival itself is being called a “miracle”.

Family’s ordeal.

The baby’s parents said they had lost all hope when her heart stopped. “We thought we had lost her. The doctors are God for us. They gave our daughter a second life,” the mother said.

This case is separate from the well-documented 2017 case of 4-month-old Aditi from Solapur who had 20+ heart attacks due to ALCAPA and was saved at HN Reliance Hospital after a 9-hour surgery. The Live Hindustan piece appears to be a recent 2026 incident involving a cardiac arrest rather than a congenital defect.