MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) - A team of 16 surgeons and nurses successfully concluded 25 hours
of delicate surgery Tuesday to separate twin Bangladeshi girls who
had been joined at their heads, sharing blood vessels and brain
tissue.
It is too early to know whether the two-year-old girls, Trishna
and Krishna, suffered any brain damage during the marathon
operation; an outcome doctors said had a 50-50 chance.
The girls will remain in an induced coma for monitoring for
several days after the completion of the surgery. The medical team
began the work Monday morning on separating the girls, who were
brought to Australia as infants by an aid organization.
"The teams managed to separate their brains and they are both
very well," Royal Children's Hospital chief Leo Donnan told
reporters. "Now we have the long task of the reconstructive
surgery, which will go on for many hours."
Plastic surgeons finished reconstructing the girls' skulls using
a combination of their own skin, bone grafts and artificial
materials about five hours after the separation surgery ended.
"Their bodies have to recover from this, and we've got a lot of
unknown territory we're moving into," Donnan said. "All I can say
is that everything is in place for the best possible outcome. The
main thing is that the girls are healthy."
Earlier Tuesday, Ian McKenzie, a member of the surgical team,
said the girls were improving as their bodies began to work
individually.
"The twins are actually in better condition because the degree
of separation has increased and this problem we've had with their
circulation affecting each other has actually gotten less," he
said.
The girls shared parts of their skull, brain tissue and blood
flow. Before the surgery, doctors had said there was a 50 percent
chance the girls could suffer brain damage and a 25 percent chance
one of the sisters would die.
They were found in an orphanage in Bangladesh in 2007 by a
representative from the Children First Foundation, who brought to
them to Australia.