The 15-month-old girls before surgery at the Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne, Australia, Nov. 9, 2018. (Photo | RCH Melbourne Creative Studio via AP) 
World

Surgeons in Australia separate conjoined girls from Bhutan

They shared a liver, but doctors started the procedure unsure if they also shared a bowel.

From our online archive

SYDNEY: Conjoined twins from Bhutan were separated at an Australian hospital Friday in a delicate operation that divided their shared liver and reconstructed their abdomens.

The 15-month-old girls, Nima and Dawa, were doing well after the surgery that lasted almost six hours, said Joe Crameri, the head of pediatric surgery at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital.

(Photo | AP)

"There weren't any things inside the girls' tummies that we weren't really prepared for," he told reporters.

The girls were joined from the lower chest to just above the pelvis. They shared a liver, but doctors started the procedure unsure if they also shared a bowel. Crameri said there were no major problems with the bowel attachment.

He said the major challenge had been to reconstruct the twins' abdomens. Crameri said the girls would be closely monitored and that his team felt "quietly confident that we will have a good result."

(Photo | AP)

He added that the girls' mother, Bhumchu Zangmo, was "smiling, very happy, and grateful."

Hindu man stabbed, set on fire in Bangladesh, escapes by jumping into pond; fourth attack in two weeks

Did candle held close to wooden ceiling spark blaze? Swiss ski resort town reels as 40 feared dead, 115 injured

RBI says economy resilient, banks stronger but warns of rising risks from unsecured loans, stablecoins

Four arrested at Indo-Nepal border in Bihar for illegal entry, fake currency recovered

Drop in terror attacks in Pakistan since Afghan border closure, 2025 most violent in decade

SCROLL FOR NEXT