View Full Version : Iranian Twins Die After Separation


LOSTNTHE80S
7-08-03, 09:32 AM
SINGAPORE, July 8 — Neurosurgeons separated 29-year-old Iranian twins joined at the head Tuesday after two days of delicate surgery, but both sisters died shortly after their parting.

THE HOSPITAL announced Ladan Bijani’s death, then, a few hours later, a nurse involved in the surgery said her sister Lelah had died.
“Everyone upstairs is crying,” said the nurse, who was directly involved in the operation. She was speaking on condition of anonymity.
“The second one has died,” she said. “We treated them like family because they had been here for seven months.”
Hospital officials had yet to officially announced the second death. Earlier, they announced the death of Ladan Bijani, saying she had lost a lot of blood as the two-day surgery was coming to a close.
Surgeons began a marathon operation to separate the twins on Sunday afternoon — warning that the operation could kill one or both.
It was the first time surgeons had attempted to separate adult craniopagus twins — siblings born joined at the head — since the operation was first performed on infants in 1952.

UNSTABLE PRESSURE LEVELS
“As the separation was coming to a close, a lot of blood was lost. The twins were subsequently in a critical state,” said hospital spokesman Dr. Prem Kumar.
The team of doctors had to contend with unstable pressure levels inside the twins’ brains just before they worked to uncouple the sisters’ brains and cut through the last bit of skull joining them, Kumar said.
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On Monday, the team of doctors completed one of the most dangerous steps in the surgery by rerouting a shared vein and stitched in a new one. The shared vein, thick as a finger, drained blood from the twins’ brains to their hearts.
The sisters’ brains had “to be teased apart very slowly,” Kumar said. “Cut. Teased apart. Cut. Teased apart. In the process, you encounter a lot of blood vessels and other tissues.”
He said surgeon worked “millimeter by millimeter.”
The operation was complicated further when the team discovered that the pressure in the twins’ brains and circulatory system was fluctuating.

FACING THE DANGER
Monday’s rerouting the shared vein was considered one of the biggest obstacles in the surgery. German doctors told the twins in 1996 that the surgery was too dangerous, but the Singapore team benefited from technological advances, Kumar said.
It was known that the operation could kill one or both of the sisters, but after a lifetime of compromising on everything from when to wake up to what career to pursue, the sisters said they would rather face those dangers than continue living joined.
“If God wants us to live the rest of our lives as two separate, independent individuals, we will,” Ladan said before the operation.
An international team of 28 doctors and about 100 medical assistants were enlisted for the surgery. The Iranian government said Monday it would pay the nearly $300,000 cost of the operation and care for the twins.

This is the first time surgeons have tried to separate adult craniopagus twins - siblings born joined at the head. The surgery has been performed successfully since 1952 on infants, whose brains can more easily recover.
Participating neurosurgeon Dr. Benjamin Carson, director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore, has separated three sets of craniopagus twins.
Because this operation is a medical first, surgeons have encountered unexpected obstacles not seen in infants. It took longer to cut through portions of their skulls because their older bones were denser than previously believed, Kumar said.
As the procedure dragged on, surgeons tried to get adequate rest, slipping out of the operating room for breaks when their expertise was not needed, Kumar said.
Classical music played softly as surgeons worked simultaneously in tight spaces in front of and behind the twins, who sat in a custom-built brace connected to an array of lines feeding them intravenously and monitoring their vital signs, Kumar said.
The sisters were born into a poor family of 11 children in Firouzabad, southern Iran, but grew up in Tehran under doctors’ care.
As girls they used to cheat on tests by whispering answers to each other, they told reporters last month.

Jughead Jones
7-08-03, 09:41 AM
Oh, that's too bad. I saw the story unfold on the news. I really hoped that things would have gone better.

My thoughts go out to their family.

Pagan
7-08-03, 09:47 AM
I just heard this on the news. I knew something like this would happen when yesterday they said the operation - which they predicted would last 48 hours - was in its 56th hour.

Very sad....but you have to look at it from the perspective they had...at least they're free now.

RetroMan
7-08-03, 09:48 AM
terribly sad :( when I saw the news tonight, one was still alive but in a critical condition. They said before it was carried out that it was a very intricate and possibly fatal operation - you want to believe everything turns out ok though. poor girls :(

LOSTNTHE80S
7-08-03, 09:55 AM
Very sad....but you have to look at it from the perspective they had...at least they're free now.

That was very well put Alan :)

They wanted to be free, and now they are.

jen*
7-08-03, 10:44 AM
I, too, was afraid that the surgery would not be successful. :(

sketcher
7-08-03, 10:54 AM
I was hoping they would survive but this morning I was so sad to hear that they did not. I still am. Maybe it's because I'm the same age as them and I'm thinking what it's like to die now. At least they knew what the consequences were and they made an informed decision.

I guess it's for the best-- I'm imagining how much pain they must have endured being conjoined that they would risk death to be seperated.

It really does put a lot of things in perspective.

BrandyBlue
7-08-03, 11:11 AM
Originally posted by Pagan
I just heard this on the news. I knew something like this would happen when yesterday they said the operation - which they predicted would last 48 hours - was in its 56th hour.

Very sad....but you have to look at it from the perspective they had...at least they're free now.

I agree. They felt like they needed to take that chance because that is what would make them feel happy. If you are going to die, it might as well be in the pursuit of happiness. I do feel bad for the remaining family.

JS
7-08-03, 12:46 PM
:( :cry: :( :cry:

Brand1974
7-08-03, 01:38 PM
I wasn't surprised by the fact that they died. I didn't think they would make it. I heard that the vein they shared was the size of a finger. That's big ass vein

DC Rebel
7-08-03, 02:30 PM
Even though I believe that it is sad news about what happened, I would have to agree with Pagan and his comments.

BlueMolly2001
7-08-03, 04:02 PM
It's sad, but they knew what they were getting into. They were both brave women, and my heart goes to their family.

Sarg
7-08-03, 06:10 PM
It's so sad to hear this news. I knew the sister's were going to have the surgery done, but this is the first time I've heard of the result of their surgery. They were brave women and they said in the news a few days ago that they knew the risk, but wanted to do it anyway. My thoughts are with their family.

Iluvthe80s
7-08-03, 06:27 PM
I first heard about the twins on the news yesterday. It's sad they did not make it. :(

Rhelawen
7-08-03, 10:34 PM
This is very sad news, however, the twins did know about their chances, and it's the choice they made. May they both rest in peace. :rose: