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Mrs Bateson said the family have returned home for a few weeks before the operation at Great Ormond Street at the end of May. ‘Hannah will give up work, not many people want to do that, but she’d love to because it means (the twins) are here.’ Mr Bateson said of the couple’s experience so far: ‘Anyone else’s nightmare was our sort of dream, it was weird. The Batesons are now fundraising to help them cover the costs of constantly travelling back and forth between Northern Ireland and London. ‘We’ll be coming back here for the next 18 years, which is a very scary thing to say but if we are coming back for the next 18 years it means the girls survive.’ The girls will have prosthetic legs, they’ll have one leg each and they’ll have one prosthetic leg each and ongoing surgery the rest of their days. Mrs Bateson said: ‘Their wee bodies are different and they will be. Surgery to begin the twins' separation is scheduled for next month. They have one leg each and a shared fused leg. They were immediately moved to GOSH – the leading specialist hospital in Europe for separating conjoined twins - where operations to separate them and future treatment will take place.Īnnabelle and Isabelle have separate hearts but share a liver, bladder and bowel. The babies, joined from the chest to the pelvis, were born in March at London's University College Hospital, the closest maternity unity to Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH). Source: University of Maryland Medical Center The muscles in their backs are constantly being flexed and they often have a difficult time bending their backs forward and backwards and sitting up straight. In order to determine the feasibility of separation, doctors must carefully assess how the twins' shared organs function.Īfter separation, most twins need intensive rehabilitation because of the malformation and position of their spines. It is only after twins are born that doctors can use magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound and angiography to find out what organs the twins share. Since 1950, at least one twin has survived separation about 75 percent of the time. In cases of twins where the pumping chambers of their hearts are conjoined, there are no known survivors.Īlthough success rates have improved over the years, surgical separation is still rare. Mortality rates for twins who undergo separation vary, depending on their type of connection, and the organs they share. Therefore, the decision to separate twins is a serious one. The surgical separation of conjoined twins is a delicate and risky procedure, requiring extreme precision and care. Miracle is the word we've used from the day we found out we were having them,' Mrs Bateson said. Mr and Mrs Bateson were referred to London's University College Hospital for the babies to be delivered by a specialist team in March.ĭoctors revealed Annabelle and Isabelle, now aged six weeks, were joined from the chest to the pelvis and shared a bladder, bowel and a fused leg - but crucially had sperate hearts. 'You felt in limbo because we knew they were conjoined but we knew so little about the information about the extent of the conjoin,' Mrs Bateson told ITV News.Įven as their due date approached, the couple said they still knew 'so little' about the girls' condition and how they would fare. Medics knew that the girls shared several key body parts but they could not yet tell if any vital organs were affected - a key factor for their survival and long term health. The couple began fertility treatment last year to help them conceive and were surprised to learn Mrs Bateson had fallen pregnant within the first cycle.īut they were given a scare when a 12-week scan revealed the twins were conjoined, something that only happens once in every 2.5m or so pregnancies. A British couple have shared their joy after giving birth to their 'miracle' one-in-two-million conjoined twins.Īfter a rollercoaster nine months, Hannah and Dan Bateson, from Toomebridge in Northern Ireland, welcomed Annabelle and Isabelle into the world in March.