Woman lived to 99 with most organs on wrong side of body

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By Associated Press

SALEM, Ore. — Rose Marie Bentley was an avid swimmer, raised five kids, helped her husband run a feed store, and lived to the ripe age of 99. It was only a year after she died, in 2017, that students and their teacher at a medical school discovered that all her internal organs except for her heart were in the wrong place.

The discovery of the rare condition, which this week was presented to a conference of anatomists, was astounding, especially because Walker had lived so long. People with the condition known as situs inversus with levocardia often have life-threatening cardiac ailments and other abnormalities, according to Oregon Health & Science University.

Cameron Walker’s class at the university in Portland was examining the heart of a cadaver last year when they noticed the blood vessels were different. When they opened the abdominal cavity, they saw that all the other organs were on the wrong side.

In a telephone interview Tuesday, Walker described his reaction to the find.

“Definitely a mix of curiosity, fascination and a sense of wanting to explore a little bit of a medical mystery — a medical marvel really — that was in front of us,” Walker told The Associated Press. “And I would say the students felt something very similar.”

Bentley’s family had not known about the condition that OHSU says occurs only once in every 22,000 births. Apparently Bentley didn’t either.

Bentley, who lived in Molalla, 25 miles (40 kilometers) south of Portland, had led a normal life. Her only recurrent physical complaint was arthritis, her daughter Louise Allee remembered.

But there were signs.

When Bentley was in her 50s, she underwent a hysterectomy, and the doctor also wanted to remove the appendix. But he couldn’t find it, Allee said in a phone interview.

When Bentley had her gallbladder removed at least a decade later, it was on the opposite side of where it should have been, she said.

“No one said a thing,” Allee said. “I was surprised. This was before they did it with a scope, and she had a good-sized incision. You’d think they would have said something, but they didn’t.”

Walker had agreed to donate her body to OHSU, Oregon’s only academic health center. The first sign for the students there that Walker’s anatomy was unusual was when they were examining the area around her heart.

“They were noticing that the blood vessels were different there and called us over, and instead of telling them that they were blind I decided we would take look and try to figure out what the anomaly was,” said Walker, an assistant professor of anatomy.

“And It wasn’t completely clear until we went into the abdominal cavity … that her organs were transposed left to right,” Walker said.

The unusual blood vessels near the heart had helped compensate for the condition.

Walker on Monday gave a poster presentation about the discovery at an annual meeting of the American Association of Anatomists, in Orlando, Florida, on experimental biology.

“This is an important case that really gave us an opportunity to talk about the importance of future clinicians paying attention to subtle anatomic variations, not just large anatomic variations, in terms of addressing their future patients as individuals,” Walker said. “Don’t judge a book by its cover, and always check and see what you’ve got before you talk about care.”

He has researched how old people with the condition have lived, and he found no one documented cases in which a person lived beyond age 73. Bentley surpassed that by 26 years.

Allee said her mother would have been delighted that the donation of her body led to a learning experience.

“She would have been tickled to know she could educate with something unusual,” Allee said. “Dad would have loved to know about it so he could tease her.”

Her husband, James, died about 15 years ago.

source: nbcnews.com