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Fiona Gets Help From Human Baby Medical Experts

Update 02/21/17:The Cincinnati Zoo says, "Fiona took two bottles this morning and seems to have more energy. She's still receiving fluids via IV but she is able to get up and move around with help."Original Post: A team of medical professionals from Cincinnati Children鈥檚 Hospital Medical Center worked on a different kind of patient last week. Members of the vascular access team were called to the Cincinnati Zoo to get an intravenous line set up for a baby hippopotamus.

Zoo staff have been caring for Fiona since she was born prematurely on January 24. She weighed only 29 pounds, which is 25 pounds less than the lowest recorded birth weight for her species, according to the Zoo.

Friday, Fiona became dehydrated and the Zoo called Children鈥檚 for assistance.

鈥淧reemies have very tiny and unstable veins, and even though our vet team was able to get multiple IVs placed, the veins could not sustain the IV and would blow,鈥 curator of mammals Christina Gorsuch said.

Two VAT team members went to the zoo with ultrasound equipment and placed an IV catheter in Fiona. The line lasted about 30 minutes before the vein blew. The team set a second IV in one of Fiona鈥檚 deep leg veins.

鈥淔ive bags of fluid later, Fiona is showing signs of recovery,鈥 Gorsuch said.  鈥淪he is still sleeping a lot but has started to take bottles again and has periods of carefully-supervised activity. The catheter is still in place.鈥

This is not the first time the Zoo and Children鈥檚 have worked together.  In 2015, an aardvark went to Children鈥檚 for CT and MRI scans to get a look for what might have been causing persistent ocular drainage.  Children鈥檚 staff have also consulted on baby gorillas, polar bear pregnancy tests and more.

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Children's staff hooked up an IV to keep Fiona hydrated.
Provided / Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden
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Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden
Children's staff hooked up an IV to keep Fiona hydrated.
Provided / Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden
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Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden
Provided / Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden
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Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden

Rinehart has been a radio reporter since 1994 with positions in markets like Omaha and Lincoln, Nebraska; Sioux City, Iowa; Dayton, Ohio: and most recently as senior correspondent and anchor for Cincinnati鈥檚 WLW-AM.