Parents take baby to hospital with breathing trouble, doctors find 3.5 kg parasitic twin in her stomatch, removed

Baby Nisha
Baby Nisha

Mettupalayam, August 10: Baby Nisha’s panicked parents rushed her to hospital after she wasn’t feeding or gaining weight and her stomach had swollen, reports mirror.co.uk.

Surgeons performed an ultrasound and discovered a huge cystic lesion occupying the whole of the abdomen, which was displacing her organs to the right corner of her stomach cavity.

Her left kidney was completely plastered to the cystic mass and her left colon, spleen, pancreas and bowels were pushed into the corner of her abdomen.

One-year old Nisha seen cradled by her mother Sumathi prior to her surgery on August 06, 2016 in Mettupalayam, India.

Nisha’s mother Sumathi and her father Raju, had no idea how severe her condition was.

Nisha’s mother Sumathi and her father Raju, from Mettupalayam, Chennai, had no idea how severe her condition was.

Doctors at Sri Ganapathy Krishna Hospital told the Times of India: “It was only after the child began having issues breathing and having food and the stomach had grown to a noticeably abnormal size did they go to a private doctor in Erode.”

A view of the parasitic twin, removed after surgeons operated on Nisha, on August 06, 2016 in Mettupalayam, India

A view of the parasitic twin after it was removed.

Niche was referred to paediatric and laparoscopic surgeon Dr D Vijayagiri with what was thought to be a large cyst.

He later diagnosed her with foetus-in-fetu – where a parasitic twin resides inside the host twin and feeds off their blood supply.

A view of the parasitic twin, removed after surgeons operated on Nisha, on August 06, 2016 in Mettupalayam, India.

The parasitic twin after it had been removed.

Dr D Vijayagiri added: “The surgery to perform is a highly complicated one and technically demanding because the parasitic twin will be densely adherent to the host organs.”

The incredibly rare condition occurs in just one in ten million patients.

If anything goes wrong during surgery the host’s organs can be damaged and may have to be removed alongside the parasitic twin.

Dr, D Vijayagiri with Nisha after the surgery.

But during a successful two-hour surgery, surgeons carefully dissected the cyst and were able to remove it completely.

All of Nisha’s organs were moved to their correct places and she is now recovering well under the watchful eye of her parents.

The surgeons pose for a picture after the successful completion of Nisha's operation, on August 06, 2016 in Mettupalayam, India

The surgeons pose for a picture after the successful completion of the procedure.

There are several theories exploring the origin of parasitic twins, which include that the mass starts as a normal foetus but becomes enveloped inside its twin in utero.

Photo courtesy: mirror.co.uk

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