Swiss doctors separate 8-day-old conjoined twins

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AFP, Geneva :
Swiss doctors have separated eight-day-old conjoined twin sisters fused at the liver and chest – the youngest separated successfully, a Swiss newspaper reported on Sunday.
Five surgeons, assisted by two nurses and six anaesthesiologists, carried out the successful, five-hour operation last month to separate the tiny identical twins, the Le Matin Dimanche weekly said.
Maya and Lydia were born at a Bern hospital two months prematurely along with their triplet sister Kamilla on December 2. The two were joined by the liver and the chest.
The conjoined twins were initially stable and doctors had planned to allow them to settle after birth and separate them after a few months.
But after a week, their situation deteriorated dramatically: one suffering from hypertension and the other suffering from the opposite condition, known as hypotension.
Both conditions were life-threatening to the frail twins, who weighed just 2.4 pounds each, and the doctors decided their only chance was a surgery never before performed on such young infants.
Separating the babies’ liver put both under massive pressure, said Barbara Wildhaber, head of the paediatric surgery unit at the Geneva University Hospital, who headed the
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