“…Vomiting and aspiration, even with nasogastric tube in-situ, were earlier noted as major drawbacks to jack-knife positioning for PSARP. [1,2,6,16] Consequently, babies who presented after the first week of life, diagnosed with associated life threatening congenital anomaly (especially cardiac), has gross abdominal distension with splinted diaphragm, aspirated before presentation with clinical evidence of sepsis, poor renal status, and derangement in hemogram and blood chemistry, were excluded from the study and offered conventional PSARP. [2,3,13] Centers [9,14,15,17,20] in developed countries included and reported encouraging results with much larger series.…”