A pair of 13-month-old conjoined
sisters, who were abandoned by their poverty-stricken parents, have been
successfully separated.
Aradhana and Stuti were left at the Missionary Hospital in Padhar,
India, after they were born on May 11 last year, because their parents
could not afford to take care of them. Their father Hari Ram Yadav is a poor local farmer who has just two acres of land.
The twins, who were joined at the
chest, were separated 20 June 2012 during a 12-hour operation involving 23
doctors and 11 nurses from India and Australia. They were wheeled in the
operation room at 8am, before the surgery followed from 9am to 9pm. The team first separated their hearts, which
were joined by the same membrane, followed by their fused livers.
Before the operation
Conjoined twins Stuti and Aradhna:
at the Mission Hospital in
India.
Separated: The team splits into to work on
sealing up the twins chests.
Hospital Superintendent Dr Rajiv
Choudhry said he was happy with how the surgery went. The special
sisters will now remain on
ventilators and under close observation for the next 48 hours.
The team had done a dry run of the entire procedure beforehand.
The surgery was
funded by Indian TV viewers and local politicians after hearing of their
plight.
The
outpouring of generosity, with thousands of small donations by members
of the public, is unusual in India where girls are often not valued in
rural communities and disabled babies are often abandoned.
Public generosity was
matched by a £22,000 fund from the Madhya Pradesh state government.
Separated: Twins Aradhana and Stuti post
operation at Padhar Hospital. They are both on ventilators.
The girls have been
cared for by
hospital staff since their birth, with three nurses taking shifts to act
as
surrogate mothers. Surgeons at the under-equipped Paddar Hospital spent
months
appealing for international help and preparing for the operation.
The hospital
persuaded the parents, who already have a six-year-old son, to continue
having a relationship with their daughters. The couple Hari Ram Yadav
and Maya Yadav now hope to take their girls home after surgery.
'We are happy that they will finally
get
to be a family and both the girls will get a proper home,' said Vikas
Sonwani, assistant administrator of Paddar Hospital.
The twin girls have been looked after and even named by the hospital
staff. Both their names mean 'prayer'.
Conjoined twins occur in around one in every 200,000 live births. They are identical - coming from a single egg that doesn't fully separate after fertilization and therefore always the same sex.
Conjoined twins occur in around one in every 200,000 live births. They are identical - coming from a single egg that doesn't fully separate after fertilization and therefore always the same sex.
Their prospects vary
widely depending on their general
state of health, how they are joined and what organs are shared.
Medical experts from India and Australia work to
separate the twins.
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