Home
Main News
Business
Opinion & Editorial
Sports
Youth & Campus
Entertainment
Agriculture
Infotech
Health
Tourism
Society
Metro & National News
Provincial News
Motoring Sections
Schools Colleges and Universities
Well Being
Technews
Taste
Comics
PANORAMA
TEMPO
CLASSIFIED ADS



 


 
Conjoined Filipino twins separated

   

NEW YORK (AP) — Two-year-old twins from the Philippines who were joined at the tops of their heads have been surgically separated, a hospital spokesman said.

Doctors teased apart abutting portions of Carl and Clarence Aguirre’s brains at 10:32 p.m. Wednesday (0232 GMT Thursday) after completing an incision around their skull, said Steve Osborne, a spokesman for the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore Medical Center.

The boys survived, and doctors, nurses and technicians applauded in the operating room, Osborne said.

The twins’ head-to-head operating tables were then pulled apart slightly, said Osborne, who was in the OR.

Wednesday’s surgery climaxed a number of gradual operations during the past 10 months, a departure from the more common marathon operations that have separated other conjoined twins.

The operation continued after the separation. Doctors planned to reconstruct a membrane that covered the boys’ brains and then cover their heads with skin, some of it from tissue expanders that had been planted beneath their scalps.

Doctors have warned that it will be months before the twins’ conditions and the success of the separation can be fully assessed.

In the past, separation was considered a success if both twins simply survived. But the hospital’s goal for the boys, who have never been able to sit up, stand straight, or look at each other’s face, was "viable, independent lives."

During four major surgeries since October, the boys’ separate-but-touching brains were gently pushed apart and the tangle of blood vessels they shared were cut and divided. Between surgeries, the boys were given time to heal and to adapt to their rerouted circulation systems. Originally, veins near Clarence’s brain were doing much of the circulation work for both boys, but scans showed dormant veins on Carl’s side had "plumped up" and begun working in response to the surgery, lead surgeon Dr. James Goodrich said last week.

In Wednesday’s operation, which began at 10 a.m. (1400 GMT), doctors cut a window into the skull and divided the last major vein the brothers shared, along with other blood vessels. About six hours into that procedure, they decided the boys were doing well enough to continue.

The doctors said last week that excessive bleeding or swelling in the brain would force a postponement.

The boys’ mother Arlene Aguirre and her mother Evelyn Aguirre were at the hospital throughout the operation, getting occasional updates from the doctors.

They had sent the feisty, dark-haired boys into the operating room with tearful kisses at about 7:30 a.m. (1130 GMT) Arlene Aguirre placed a small figure of the Virgin Mary on her sons’ gurney, and it stayed with them, on an instrument cart, through the surgery.





Complete list of physical and occupational therapists
Palace warns oil companies
PET asked to dismiss FPJ-Loren protests
House praises Ka Turing as best parliamentarian
Manila councilors unanimous in junking two-child measure
Supreme Court launches online monitoring of cases
Filipino artist wins ASEAN art award
Conjoined Filipino twins separated