PHILADELPHIA (AP) - More than nine months after they were born joined
at the lower chest and abdomen, twin girls made their public debut
Thursday at the hospital where they were separated.
Allison June and Amelia Lee Tucker, clad in
animal-striped shirts and flowered headbands, were introduced during a
news conference at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Both girls still
have nasal tubes but appeared rosy-cheeked and alert as they were held
by their parents, Shellie and Greg Tucker, of Adams, N.Y., about 300
miles north of Philadelphia near Lake Ontario.
Allison, described by doctors and her parents as
the smaller but feistier twin, was discharged from the hospital Monday.
Her sister Amelia, who's larger and more reserved, needs a little more
recovery time and will remain in the hospital into the new year.
"We totally expect them to have full, independent
lives," said pediatric surgeon Dr. Holly Hedrick, who led a 40-person
medical team in the complex seven-hour operation on Nov. 7.
The twins shared a chest wall, diaphragm, liver and pericardium, the membrane around the heart.
Shellie Tucker was about 20 weeks into her
pregnancy when she learned she was carrying conjoined twins. Prenatal
screening tests at Children's Hospital, including ultrasound imaging and
MRI, determined that they would be good candidates for separation.
Planning for the separation surgery began months
before the twins were delivered by cesarean section on March 1. Shortly
after they were born, plastic surgeons inserted expanders under the
girls' skin to increase the skin surface available to cover exposed
organs after their separation.
Shellie Tucker described the past year as a "roller
coaster ride" but said she was relieved now that her daughters are
doing so well.
"The burden is completely gone, and I am very, very happy," she said.
The surgery was the 21st successful separation of conjoined twins performed at the hospital. The first was in 1957.
According to statistics provided by the hospital,
conjoined twins occur once in every 50,000 to 60,000 births and about 70
percent are female. Most conjoined twins are stillborn.