Craniopagus parasiticus

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Craniopagus parasiticus is a medical condition in which a parasitic twin head with an undeveloped (or underdeveloped) body is attached to the head of a developed twin.

There have only been eight documented cases of this phenomenon, though to-date there have been at least eighty separate cases of this phenomenon written about in various records [1]. Only three ever have been documented by modern medicine to have survived birth. On December 10, 2003, Rebeca Martínez was born in the Dominican Republic with this rare condition. She was the first baby born with the condition to undergo an operation to remove the second head. She died on February 7, 2004, after an 11-hour operation. On February 19, 2005, Manar Maged underwent a successful 13-hour surgery in Egypt, but died March 25, 2006 [2]. Manar featured on an episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show.

An earlier case was the so-called "Two-Headed Boy of Bengal," who was born in 1783 and died of a cobra bite in 1787. His skull remains in the collection of the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of London.[3].

[edit] References

  • Aquino DB, Timmons C, Burns D, Lowichik A (1997). "Craniopagus parasiticus: a case illustrating its relationship to craniopagus conjoined twinning". Pediatr Pathol Lab Med 17 (6): 939-44. PMID 9353833.
  • Bondeson J, Allen E (1991). "Everard Home's famous two-headed boy of Bengal and some other cases of craniopagus parasiticus". Surg Neurol 35 (6): 483. PMID 2053064.
  • Nair KR (1990). "Craniopagus parasiticus". Surg Neurol 33 (2): 159. PMID 2406987.
  • Bondeson J, Allen E (1989). "Craniopagus parasiticus. Everard Home's Two-Headed Boy of Bengal and some other cases". Surg Neurol 31 (6): 426-34. PMID 2655135.
  • Wang DM, Zhang PL (1985). "[A case report of craniopagus parasiticus (clinical features and the histological study of the accessory brain)]". Zhonghua Zheng Xing Shao Shang Wai Ke Za Zhi 1 (1): 31-3. PMID 3939788.
  • Wang TM, Li BQ, Li-Che, Fu CL (1982). "Craniopagus parasiticus: a case report of a parasitic head protruding from the right side of the face". Br J Plast Surg 35 (3): 304-11. PMID 7150854.

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