AIIMS docs to try separating twins joined at head

Toddlers from Odisha to undergo series of tests for checking surgery feasibility; parents keep hopes high

July 15, 2017 01:13 am | Updated 01:13 am IST - New Delhi

New Delhi: : Parents of conjoined twins of Kandhamal district wait to board the Bhubaneswar-New Delhi Rajadhani express for treatment in Delhi, in Bhubaneswar. PTI Photo  (PTI7_14_2017_000146B)

New Delhi: : Parents of conjoined twins of Kandhamal district wait to board the Bhubaneswar-New Delhi Rajadhani express for treatment in Delhi, in Bhubaneswar. PTI Photo (PTI7_14_2017_000146B)

Doctors at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) here are examining a pair of two-year-old twins joined at the head, and will assess whether surgery can be performed to separate them.

The twins -- Jagannath and Balram -- from Kandhamal district in Odisha, were taken to AIIMS after they were brought here from Bhubaneswar on Friday afternoon.

Status unclear

They were accompanied by their parents and Assistant Manager of National Adolescent Health Programme, Soumya Samantray. Dr. A. K. Mahapatra, chief of the Neurosciences Centre at AIIMS, said the twins will undergo a series of tests such as MRI, CT scan, and angiogram, to see to what extent the veins in their brains are fused and whether surgery is feasible.

“They are craniopagus twins, that is who are connected at the head. This is a rare condition. It is very difficult at this stage to say if surgery is feasible to separate them. They will undergo several tests in the next 10-12 days, after which we will decide,” Dr. Mahapatra said.

Dr. Deepak Gupta, professor of neurosurgery, said the twins suffer from a rare condition which afflicts one in 30 lakh children, of which 50% die either at birth or within 24 hours. Surgery is feasible only on 25% of the survivors, while the rest continue to live with the condition.

‘Challenging surgery’

“Also, there is less than a 20% chance of survival among those who undergo this surgery. Such operations are extremely challenging and doctors from plastic surgery, paediatric surgery, anaesthetists and radiologists, among others, will be involved,” Dr Gupta said.

Jagannath and Balram’s parents, who are farmers, expressed the hope that doctors would perform the surgery and separate their sons. “We have come all the way from Odisha with the hope that the lives of our children will be transformed after the surgery. The rest is up to God,” their mother said.

Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu, who came to know about the twins travelling on the Bhubaneswar Rajdhani to Delhi, ensured medical facilities for them during the journey and also arranged transport to take them to AIIMS from the New Delhi railway station.

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