Dominick Smith spent the first week of summer break at Norton Children’s Hospital. While it wasn’t the ideal way to wrap up the school year, the junior from Petersburg, Indiana, was grateful. On the last day of school, a doctor discovered Dominick had an aortic aneurysm with aortic dissection — a potentially fatal time bomb that could have gone off at any moment.
Dominick was at wrestling practice at Pike Central High School. That day, there happened to be a retired doctor with a machine to do an echocardiogram, which uses ultrasound to take pictures of the heart.
“Since it was the last day of school, I wanted to skip, but a retired doctor was doing free physicals, and mom wanted me to get that,” Dominick said.
According to Dominick, his echocardiogram took a bit longer than the rest of his teammates’, and that’s when the doctor called in the wrestling coach and then set Dominick up with a hospital in Jasper, Indiana, the next day. A CT scan confirmed the suspicion.
“They basically said, “Your aorta — it’s very enlarged,’” Dominick said.
Dominick had a massive aortic aneurysm with evidence of aortic dissection. The main artery that carries blood from the heart to the rest of the body was triple the usual size. And the vessel already had begun to tear. One blow to the chest could’ve ended Dominick’s life in an instant.
“It’s like a balloon. You keep blowing it up, eventually, it’s going to rupture,” said Bahaaldin Alsoufi, M.D., chief of pediatric cardiothoracic surgery at Norton Children’s Heart Institute, affiliated with the UofL School of Medicine.
There was no time to waste. The Norton Children’s Hospital “Just for Kids” Transport Team picked up Dominick and flew him to Louisville for open heart surgery that night. Dr. Alsoufi successfully performed the five-hour operation.
“Considering the acuity of his condition and complexity of the needed surgery, Dominick did great and had excellent recovery from his surgery.” Dr. Alsoufi said.
‘You’ve got some guardian angel’
What makes Dominick’s story unique is aortic dissection and massive aneurysm isn’t a condition often seen in 16-year-olds, especially ones with no family history or known genetic issues. Additionally, the fact that it was discovered accidentally without him having any symptom makes it more unique.
“He was completely asymptomatic. No chest pain. No history of any trauma to the chest,” Dr. Alsoufi said.
Had Dominick skipped school and not had that test at wrestling practice, there’s a good chance the teen wouldn’t be here today, according to Dr. Alsoufi.
“I told him, ‘You’ve got some guardian angel,’” he said.
Getting back to life
Dominick is recovering from his surgery. Wrestling and other contact sports are out of the question, but he knows it’s a small price to pay for saving his life.
“Somehow, just everything aligned,” he said. “And for that I’m grateful.”