back to top
Wednesday, 21 May, 2025
HomeSurgeryTeenager’s 16kg ‘parasitic’ twin removed in rare surgery

Teenager’s 16kg ‘parasitic’ twin removed in rare surgery

Doctors in India have successfully carried out a rare and life-changing surgery to remove a 17-year-old boy’s “parasitic” twin.

Parasitic twins occur when one foetus stops developing but remains attached and dependent upon its twin, with such cases thought to occur in just one in 100 000 births.

As few as 50 such cases have been documented in medical literature worldwide and in those cases the surgery had been attempted on younger children, said Dr Asuri Krishna, who led the team which carried out the latest “breakthrough” surgery in Delhi.

The Independent reports that before the surgery, the teenager from a remote village in Uttar Pradesh had lived with two fully formed legs, buttocks and external genitalia protruding from his abdomen, all of which, surprisingly to doctors, were capable of feeling pain, touch and changes in temperature.

The teenager said “a new world has opened up” to him since the surgery on 8 February, telling the Indian Express: “I couldn’t travel anywhere or do any physical activity.”

Krishna, of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), said his team had to rely on their “intuition, skill and knowledge” given the lack of existing medical literature to guide them during the surgery.

Initial scans had revealed that the parasitic twin was attached to the teenager’s breastbone and was receiving blood from a vessel in his chest – but did not have a significant connection with other major organs, such as the liver or kidneys. A cyst was also discovered in the teenager’s abdomen.

“The biggest challenge was the rarity of this condition. No one had seen this before. However, with meticulous planning and imaging we were able to construct a surgical plan,” Krishna said.

The surgery was carried out in two parts, the first of which involved removing the parasitic limb, requiring the surgical team to meticulously separate a mesh of shared blood vessels, nerves and tissues.

“One of the major concerns was possibility of involvement of the host kid internal organs, but fortunately there was none,” the surgeon said.

The second part of the surgery involved removing the cyst in the boy’s abdomen, extracting it from his abdominal wall, bowel and liver.

While the teenager’s blood pressure dropped dangerously, as 30% to 40% of his blood flowed to the parasitic twin, the doctors said they were prepared for this and were able to swiftly stabilise him.

“Seventeen years of stigma and suffering – ended in just two and a half hours,” Krishna later wrote on social media.

“Four days’ post-surgery, he walked out of the hospital – ready to reclaim his life. This is the power of medical science and teamwork, transforming not just a body but a future.”

 

The Independent article – Teenager’s 16kg ‘parasitic’ twin removed by doctors in extremely rare surgery (Open access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Foetus removed from brain of one-year-old girl

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.