A baby boy born with eight limbs is said to be recovering well after doctors removed his 'parasitic twin'.
Three-month old baby Paul Mukisa was born with four legs and four arms in Nabigingo, a small village in eastern Uganda.
Parents
Margaret Awino and Boniface Okongo rushed the child to a nearby
district hospital but were told there was nothing medics could do.
They were then
referred to Mulago Hospital in the Ugandan capital of Kampala, where a
team of surgeons led by Dr John Sekabira, a consultant Paediatric
surgeon, assessed the little boy and discovered that not only did he
have four extra limbs and what appeared to be an extra chest, but that
his heart and the liver were on the wrong sides.
Doctors also discovered that the parasitic twin shared part of the boy's pelvic bone.
Surgeons then discharged the baby for three months, allowing him to grow large enough for them to safely operate on him.
On
August 18, three surgeons performed on Pail at the Ugandan hospital.
Over three hours they carefully separated parts of the parasitic twin
from his body.
Dr Nasser Kakembo, one of the surgeons who carried out the operation, told CNN:
'The baby was given general anesthesia and the torso and trunk of the
parasitic twin -- which had two arms but no head or heart -- was
detached from the host baby.
'Then we also detached the lower limbs
of the parasitic twin from the host, which included disarticulating the
right and left lower limbs as they were attached by joints. We
controlled the bleeding and fashioned skin flaps to close the resulting
wound.
He said there was only minor blood loss and no post-operation complications.
On
August 18, three surgeons performed on Pail at the Ugandan hospital.
Over three hours they carefully separated parts of the parasitic twin
from his body.
Dr Nasser Kakembo, one of the surgeons who carried out the operation, told CNN:
'The baby was given general anesthesia and the torso and trunk of the
parasitic twin -- which had two arms but no head or heart -- was
detached from the host baby.
'Then we also detached the lower limbs
of the parasitic twin from the host, which included disarticulating the
right and left lower limbs as they were attached by joints. We
controlled the bleeding and fashioned skin flaps to close the resulting
wound.
He said there was only minor blood loss and no post-operation complications.
Now, three weeks after surgery the baby looks set to make a full recovery and is now breastfeeding from his mother.
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