December 4, 2014

Conjoined Twins Born Sharing the same Arms, Legs and Body Today in Atlnata US

God is so awesome in creation. Odds of this type of conjoinment stand at one-in-a-million  

The conjoin twins named Asa and Eli Hamby born on Thursday morning in Northside Hospital, Atlanta. They are born sharing the same body, arms and legs and delivered by C-section by the mother Robin Hamby.

The twins can never be separated because of their anatomy. They have separate esophaguses, stomachs, intestines, kidneys (one each), ureters, but there  bladders, gall bladders and spinal cords. are fused together. Amazingly Asa and Eli have the same heart and have three lungs, sharing the third one. Weighed 9 pounds, 10 ounces at birth and currently both are well.
Parents Robin and Michael, both 34, originally were told they couldn't have children but later have a daughter who is 22 months and then this conjoin two.
They are happy and have accepted them. 'Children are a gift from God, and Selah was a miracle,' said Robin to the Ledger Enquirer. 'It gives us more confidence in God for the twins.

Other Conjoin Twins:


Abigail and Brittany Hensel have not only proved doctors wrong, they have astonished them with their development. The 22-year-olds, who share one body fused at the torso, have starred in their own reality TV show chronicling their graduation from Bethel University in Minnesota, their post-grad job search and their travels through Europe with friends.
 
Veena and Vani, now ten, were born joined at the head, but their parents left them in their local hospital in Hyderabad, India because they could not pay their medical expenses. For eight years the girls have eaten, played and slept in one room at Niloufer Hospital and have been cared for by nursing staff. They cannot be separated.
Their doctor, Dr Narendra Kumar, a paediatric surgeon, is trying to find an international surgeon who specialises in neurology to perform the operation.
He said: 'It has always been possible to operate on the girls because they both have individual brains.
'The problem lies with the one main blood vessel they share so it does have its risks.'

Laleh and Ladan Bijani caught the attention of the world when at the age of 29 they decided to have surgery to separate.
 
Their sister's skulls were joined above the ear but each of their brains was intact. They were never able to look into one another's face without the aid of a mirror.
Their dream was to walk out of Raffles Hospital in Singapore and walk in opposite directions. Sadly they both died after their surgery.
 
Born in Tehran in 1974, they developed different personalities and made separate groups of friends. Ladan was the stronger personality and was more talkative, while Laleh was quieter. So when Ladan said she was determined to become a lawyer, Laleh had no choice but to study law with her.
 
Shivanath and Shivram Sahu  were born in  Raipur in central India, share two legs and four arms and work in tandem to get around , with some people in their village worshipping them as divine incarnations. 

And while one doctor has said that it would be possible to separate the 12-year-olds, who were born joined at the waist, the duo are determined to remain together.

Shivram said: ‘We don't wish to get separated. We will stay like this even when we grow old. We want to live as we are.’ They have stunned doctors with their ability to wash, dress and feed themselves.
 
They are believed to share the same stomach but have independent lungs, hearts and brains. A local doctor told the family they were both healthy but he could not separate them.
 
.

 




 




 

No comments: