Conjoined Twin 'Opens Eyes' Four Days After Surgery

One of twin Indian boys who were conjoined at the head has opened his eyes four days after historic surgery to separate them, a doctor says.
Two-year-old Jaga has also responded to simple commands, including moving his limbs. He is on a ventilator and needs daily dialysis due to kidney problems.
His brother, Kalia, is not yet conscious and has suffered seizures.
The boys were born with shared blood vessels and brain tissues and it took 16 hours of surgery to separate them.
A team of 30 doctors carried out the operation - the first of its kind in India - at a state-run hospital in the capital, Delhi.
Both boys are stable and doctors are satisfied with their progress so far, Professor Deepak Gupta, who was involved in the operation, told the BBC.
The twins, who are from a village in eastern Orissa state, were joined at the head - a condition known as craniopagus.
Even before the operation they had defeated the odds - craniopagus occurs in one in three million births, and 50% of those affected die within 24 hours, doctors say.
The first surgery was performed on 28 August when the doctors created a bypass to separate the shared veins that return blood to the heart from the brain.

Comments

MOST POPULAR

Hoodlums invaded Senator Ogembe’s women empowerment programme in Kogi

95 widows of fallen heroes in Enugu receives N19m from the Nigerian Army

Dozens killed in bus and lorry road crash in Kenya-BBC

Kim is Likely to Tone Down His Weapons Testing at Least Ahead of the Olympics, said Nam Sung-wook

Drive-by attack in Italy Macerata: Foreigners targeted, say police