New Delhi: A team of doctors at AIIMS has successfully completed the first phase separation surgery on conjoined twins from Odisha.
Two-year-old twins, who are joined at the head, were brought to AIIMS on July 13.
It took doctors 20 hours to complete the first phases in which they performed venous bypass to separate the veins shared by the babies that return blood to the heart from the brain.
"The surgery began yesterday at around 9 am and went on till 5 AM today. The children are under observation," a senior doctor at AIIMS said.
According to the doctor, the surgery to separate them will be taken up by October end.
The twins--Jagannath and Balram--from Kandhamal district in Odisha, are craniopagus conjoined twins who are joined at the head. This is a very rare condition.
A team of around 20 specialists from the institute's neurosurgery, neuro-anaesthesia and plastic surgery department besides a Japanese expert were involved in the procedure.
A series of investigations, including multiple MRIs, CT scans and angiograms, were carried out on the twins to see to what extent the veins in their brains are fused and whether surgery was feasible.
Deepak Gupta, professor of neurosurgery, earlier had said the twins suffer from the condition which afflicts one in 30 lakh children, of which 50 per cent die either at birth or within 24 hours.
Surgery is feasible only on 25 per cent of the survivors while the rest continue to live with the condition.
"Also, there is less than a 20 per cent chance of survival among those who undergo this surgery. Such operations are extremely challenging," Gupta had said.
(With Agency inputs)
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