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Doctors operate on conjoined twins
AP
Last Updated IST

The two-year-old Bangladeshi orphans, Trishna and Krishna, share parts of their skull, brain tissue and blood flow.

Doctors expected the operation, which began on Monday morning, to take at least 16 hours, with a team of 16 surgeons and nurses.
“I am cautiously optimistic,” plastic surgeon Tony Holmes said after the surgery began.
Holmes said the girls were sedated on Sunday night and that an angiogram was performed to take a final look at the blood vessels before the operation. Doctors were first working to remove the bone at the back half of the girls’ heads. “It is a stressful time for any group of surgeons with this sort of case,” Holmes told reporters.
“They only come along really once in a lifetime and I think everybody has been on tenterhooks. We have had a few ups and downs with these children because of medical problems,” Holmes said.

The girls were brought to Australia in 2007 by the Children First Foundation and have already had several operations in preparation for separation. Doctors say the chance of a successful separation is 25 per cent. There is a 50 per cent chance that the girls will suffer brain damage and a 25 per cent chance one of the sisters will die.

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(Published 16 November 2009, 22:33 IST)