Doctors hope to aid baby with extra head (with pics)

jazz lady

~*~ Rara Avis ~*~
PREMO Member
MIAMI - An international team of doctors hopes to operate in the Dominican Republic next month to remove an undeveloped second head from a baby girl born with one of the world's rarest birth defects, caused when a conjoined twin fails to develop in the womb.

The baby, Rebeca Martinez, was born in mid-December at a hospital in Santo Domingo with the head of an undeveloped twin attached to the top of her skull, facing upward.

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The infant is otherwise healthy but her brain cannot develop normally unless the undeveloped head is removed, said Dr. Santiago Hazim, medical director at the CURE International Center for Orthopedic Specialties, where the surgery is tentatively set for February 6 or 7.

Her condition, cranio pagus parasiticus, is so rare that there have only been eight documented cases in the world, and no known cases where surgery has been attempted to correct it, Hazim said in a telephone interview.

Conjoined twins form when an embryo begins to split into identical twins and then stops, leaving them fused. Twins conjoined at the head account for about one of every 2.5 million births and about 2 percent of all conjoined births.

Rarer "parasitic" twins occur when one conjoined twin stops developing in the womb, leaving a smaller, incompletely formed twin that is dependent on the other. They can form as an extra limb, torso or head, or as a complete second body, lacking vital organs.

In Rebeca's case, there is a gap in her skull where the heads are joined, and the blood vessels are intertwined, Hazim said. The vestigial head is enlarged and fringed with dark hair like Rebeca's but has a poorly developed brain and only rudimentary facial features, he said.

Rebeca was born weighing about 7 pounds and now weighs over 10 pounds, but the undeveloped head is drawing away nutrients and exerting pressure on Rebeca's brain.

"She was able to go home after a couple of days in the hospital," Hazim said. "She's getting some weight on ... She cries, she wakes up in the morning like a normal child."

Dr. Jorge Lazareff, director of pediatric neurosurgery at UCLA's Mattel Children's Hospital, will lead a team of doctors traveling to Santo Domingo this weekend to examine Rebeca, meet with her parents and decide whether to proceed with the surgery.

"We want to do it, we believe it has to be done ... but the actual decision of going ahead, there is no actual decision," said Lazareff, who led the medical team that successfully separated Guatemalan twin girls joined at the head in 2002.

Two teams, each with nine volunteer doctors, would carry out the operation, working in 12-hour shifts.

Doctors would decide during the surgery whether to try closing Rebeca's skull using bone from the other skull. Otherwise, they would try to close it later using bone from a donor bank or a metal plate, Hazim said.

"It will depend on what we find," he said. "We haven't found one (case) like this in the literature that has been done. I believe this is going to be the first one."

Her parents Maria Gisela Hiciano, 26, and Franklyn Martinez, 28, earn only $200 a month and cannot pay for her medical care.

The doctors are volunteering their services. The hospital where the surgery will take place is operated by CURE International, a nonprofit organization headquartered in Pennsylvania, that provides medical and spiritual care for disabled children in developing nations.
 

SmallTown

Football season!
You're not looking at it from the right perspective. Look at through true somd eyes... Imagine the mullet that kid could have!
 

Sarah25

New Member
After the link didn't work, I googled the story. It seems that this is the second two headed baby in the Dominican Republic in two years? There are two girls, Manar and Rebecca, whose stories are about a year apart. Look into it. Interesting. . .
 

RoseRed

American Beauty
PREMO Member
Sarah25 said:
After the link didn't work, I googled the story. It seems that this is the second two headed baby in the Dominican Republic in two years? There are two girls, Manar and Rebecca, whose stories are about a year apart. Look into it. Interesting. . .

The link more than likely doesn't work because this is a three year old thread.
 

Sarah25

New Member
RoseRed said:
The link more than likely doesn't work because this is a three year old thread.


Sure, but my point is, there were two cases of the same undeveloped conjoined twin - at the head, the rarest of all cases - in two years in the same country. It seems like there might be some interesting theories about that somewhere.
 

Pandora

New Member
This thread is so old, that actually the video is out and on the Discovery Channel from time to time. Rebeca Martinez died after that surgery. A year later (Feb. 05), they did another surgery on a child, Egyptian girl, Manar Maged, that went well, but she died in March 06 of a brain infection. :ohwell:
 
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