Twin Polish girls Olga (2-L) and Daria Kolacz (R), dressed in traditional Arabic clothes, are carried by their mother Wieslawa Dabrowska, (2-R) and doctor Jolanta Jezewska (L) after arriving at Warsaw airport, Poland, Tuesday, 22 March 2005. The twins, who were joined at the abdomen, pelvis, buttocks and spine, were successfully separated on in January 2005 by Saudi surgeons, in an operation funded by Saudi Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia. PHOTO - TASR/EPA |
SINGAPORE - Doctors in Singapore may separate one-year-old Indonesian twin girls conjoined at the waist but are weighing up whether the risks are too great. Splitting the girls would require elaborate and risky surgery, according to details of their case published in Singapore's Straits Times newspaper. One girl has a hole in her heart. If she suffers a heart attack in surgery, both would most likely die, the report said. The intestines of the girls are joined and each would end up with just one leg because a third leg lacks a proper knee or hip joints, the report said. "Our doctors are still evaluating whether it is feasible to separate the conjoined twins," said a spokeswoman from Parkway Holdings Ltd., which owns Mount Elizabeth Hospital where the girls were tested after arriving from Indonesia last month.
The girls, born in rural poverty but sponsored by wealthy Indonesians after a local doctor refused to operate on them, have been moved to another Parkway hospital in Singapore, Gleneagles. Specialists from Singapore's KK Women's and Children's Hospital, also reviewed the twins at the request of Mount
Elizabeth. KK's team considered the long-term implications such as whether the girls may eventually sit and walk, and if the family can cope with the long-term follow-up care, she added.
Reuters