Saturday 6 July 2013

Conjoined Twins With Three Legs, One Liver, One Kidney Born In Abuja


 Conjoined Twins With Three Legs, One Liver, One Kidney Born In Abuja
A set of conjoined twins was on Tuesday born to the family of Mr. Elisha Bassey and his wife, Patience in Abuja.
The 32-year-old resident of the Federal Capital Teritory, Abuja, who is from Itu Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State, and his 30-year-old wife, are currently jobless and have been finding the basic necessities of life hard to get, but they got an extra burden with the birth of their conjoined twins.

Patience was delivered of the twins at about 7 pm on July 2, 3013 at LUNA Hospital in Gwarinpa, Abuja.

“The babies are joined from the stomach and chest down. They have three legs joined together, one liver, one kidney and one intestine,” Bassey said.

Ironically, the scan that was conducted didn’t reveal that it was conjoined twins.

Speaking to Punch on Friday, Bassey said his wife was still in the hospital but not fully recovered.

“The scan was done but we were not informed that it was conjoined twins. When we were told that the babies were twins, we were all happy. For now, my wife is still in the hospital, although not fully recovered. But she is responding to treatment.”

Bassey whose early thoughts was how to get money for a separation surgery had his little hopes dashed when the management of the National Hospital told him that they had done their best but there was no hope that they could do the separation.


“The doctors at the National Hospital said they have tried their best, including scanning and everything they could do within their power.

“They said there was nothing else they could do in that unit. But they told me that if I have anywhere in the world where the babies could be separated, they would assist and send an e-mail and refer the babies to that place.

“At what cost? For now, they have not told me but they said they could not do the separation here and would not know where they could transfer the babies,” Bassey stated.

Spokesperson for the National Hospital, Dr. Tayo Haastrup, told Punch that series of procedures had been done on the babies’ state of health, and they all showed them to be in good condition.

“The babies were not delivered in the National Hospital. They were delivered through a Caesarean section in a hospital somewhere in Gwarinpa; they are fine and their mother is still in the hospital, where she delivered the children. But the babies are now in our Special Care Babies Unit,” Haastrup said.

Asked if any surgery had been done or could still be done to separate the conjoined babies, Haastrup said it doesn’t really matter at the moment.

“Surgical operation is not the issue for now; but we have carried out some tests and other things to find out their state of health. They are lying now well in SCBU as I am speaking to you,” he said.
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