A little less than eight months old, Shaily tries to grab the hands of a reporter her mother is talking to while her twin Shilpa plays in her father's lap nearby.
Shaily and Shilpa were joined at birth and were surgically separated at the All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS) here a few months ago when they were six months old. They are both healthy and cheerful now.
The twins were born to Lal Bhai, a daily wage labourer, and Shashikala in Aber village of Satna in Madhya Pradesh. They were brought to AIIMS Nov 12, 2012, nearly a month after their birth. For the poor parents, a surgery for their daughters was an impossible dream. However, MP from Satna, Ganesh Singh, stepped in and brought them to AIIMS.
Doctors took nearly five months to complete checkups on the girls and plan the surgery, which took place May 29.
Doctors said the girls shared one vital organ, the liver, which was to their advantage.
"The girls were joined at chest, so our first concern was whether they shared the heart. Fortunately, they had separate hearts and other organs, but shared liver," said said M. Bajpai, professor of pediatric surgery at AIIMS.
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The surgery took about eight hours, of which nearly four hours were taken to give anesthesia. Then the liver was separated and was covered in local body tissues. The chest and bone muscles were also separated and a reconstructive surgery was done.
"We are feeling blessed that our children are healthy," said Lal Bhai.
"We were sad, we cried when they were born. We did not know why this happened. I did not know I was carrying twins. When we went for delivery to the government hospital, we were asked to go to a private hospital," said Shashikala.
However, the parents are now hopeful of a bright future for their girls. "We want to give them good opportunities in life, to educate them," said Lal Bhai.
Doctors also said that the girls would have a normal life. "They will have to come here for checkups for some years. They will have a normal life," Bajpai added.