October 18, 2015

Conjoined Brazilian Twin Girls Separated Successfully



Look at us now! The twins sit on the knees of their young parents, from left, Caique Santana and Denise Borges.

[From article]
The twin baby girls, Maria Clara and Maria Eduarda Santana, from Salvador, were born in May this year sharing an abdomen and liver
[. . .]
Now, such is the success of their life-transforming operation, which was led by pediatric surgeon Zacharias Calil, it's hard to differentiate them from any other doting young family with twins.
[. . .]
The latest photographs, taken on the 23rd September, show the chubby-cheeked twins, now five months old, dressed in pretty outfits with clips in their hair. In one shot, baby Maria Clara, who is still receiving medical care in hospital, is gently fed a bottle of milk by her mother. Another pose shows the doctors and nurses who are caring for the twins and includes one of Maria Clara preparing for an x-ray to check on her recovery.
[. . .]
Conjoined twins occur about once in every 200,000 live births and their survival is 'anything but assured' according to the University of Maryland Medical Center.
It claims 40 to 60 per cent of conjoined twins arrive stillborn and tragically, about 35 per cent only survive for a single day.
The are genetically rare and always the same sex because they develop from the same fertilised egg and share the same placenta.
'Twinning' occurs either when a woman releases two eggs instead of one or she produces an egg that divides after it has been fertilised.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3253209/Incredible-photos-conjoined-Brazilian-baby-twins-just-days-successful-six-hour-operation-separate-them.html

Incredible photos show conjoined Brazilian baby twins just days after successful six-hour operation to separate them
Twins Maria Clara and Maria Eduarda Santana were born sharing a liver and an abdomen earlier this year
The baby girls, now five months old, were born to a poor family from Salvador and were separated on September 9th
The operation to part them took six hours and involved 15 medical professionals
Photographer Mateus André travelled 260km by public transport to make sure he could snap them again
Conjoined twins occur about once in every 200,000 live births
By JO TWEEDY FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 08:31 EST, 29 September 2015 | UPDATED: 09:45 EST, 29 September 2015

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