AT A CLINIC in Salt Lake City, the
ultrasound technician moved the transducer in slow circles over Erin
Herrin’s abdomen. Erin, 20 and already the mother of a two-year-old
girl, was 18 weeks into her second pregnancy.
“Wow! Do
you see that?” said the sonographer, zeroing in on a pair of small,
fluttering images. “Two hearts! Congratulations – you’re having twins.”
Erin wasn’t entirely surprised; she’d felt extra kicks this time, though
her obstetrician had heard only one heartbeat during earlier tests. She
grinned at her husband, Jake, 21, who stood holding her hand.
Then the sonographer stopped the exam. “Just a minute,” she said. “I want the radiologist to take a look at this.”
The
Herrins waited anxiously as the specialist arrived and studied the
ultrasound scans. “It looks like you’re having conjoined twin girls,” he
said at last, his tone apologetic. “I really can’t tell you much more
than that.” He scheduled an appointment for them to meet with a
perinatologist the following Monday – four long days away.
On the
drive home, Erin, a homemaker, ran down a preliminary list of questions:
Where are the babies connected? Can they be separated? Will they ever
have a normal life? Are they even going to live? Jake, a computer
network manager, tried to reassure her. “Let’s not panic,” he said.
“Maybe they’re just attached by a bit of skin and there’s a way to fix
it.”
As it turned out, the twins shared a great deal more than
that. If they made it to term, their only hope of independence – from
each other as well as from their caregivers – would be a surgical
procedure of almost unima-ginable complexity. In fact, it would be the
first operation of its kind.
WHEN THEY GOT HOME from the clinic
that autumn day in 2001, Jake and Erin looked up conjoined twins online.
They learned that in one out of 100,000 pregnancies, a fertilised egg
fails to divide fully into identical twins, leaving two foetuses joined
at some point along their bodies. For unknown reasons, about 70 percent
are girls, and in most cases, their shared internal organs are severely
deformed. Up to 60 percent of conjoined twins are stillborn; of those
who survive birth, 35 percent live only one day. The overall survival
rate is 25 percent.
The first successful separation took place in
Switzerland in 1689 – a simple case involving superficially joined
twins. But such operations remained almost unheard-of until surgical
techniques improved in the 1950s. Since then, a few dozen sets of twins
worldwide have been separated. Survival rates vary depending on where
the twins are connected, from 82 percent for those joined only at the
abdomen to zero for those who share a heart.
At the
perinatologist’s office, the Herrins learned that their twins were
joined frontally at the abdomen and pelvis. They had two legs (each twin
controlled one) and shared a liver and a large intestine. To deliver
the girls, Erin would need a large vertical Caesarean section, which
could result in huge blood loss.
The doctor told the couple that,
because of the enormous complications, Erin would be risking her life to
go ahead with the birth.
The Herrins’ Mormon religion permits
abortion in certain cases – when the foetus has defects that would
prevent it from surviving beyond birth, for instance, or when the
mother’s health is in danger. But Erin said that was not what she
wanted. So the perinatologist referred the couple to Dr Rebecka Meyers,
chief of paediatric surgery at Primary Children’s Medical Center in Salt
Lake City. At their first meeting, Dr Meyers told the Herrins their
twins had strong vital signs and good odds of making it to term.
“Jake and I looked at each other and knew we had to go forward,” Erin recalls. “There wasn’t any doubt.”
IN
HER 26TH WEEK of pregnancy, Erin began haemorrhaging, and shortly
afterwards her water broke. Her doctors were able to prevent a
miscarriage but kept her in the hospital on strict bed rest. Lying on
her back day after day, she hardly dared to think beyond the babies’
birth.
On February 26, 2002, Kendra and Maliyah were born by
C-section, eight weeks premature. Together, they weighed just 2.8
kilograms. “They were beautiful,” says Jake. “They just happened to be
stuck together.”
Too small to survive on their own, the twins were
whisked off to the hospital’s intensive care unit. Prematurity was far
from their only problem. When they were three days old, tests showed
that only one of the girls’ three kidneys – the one on Kendra’s side –
was functional.
No-one could be sure how long the organ would
support both twins, but as the weeks passed, their condition stabilised.
After two months in the ICU, the girls were strong enough to go home,
and their parents were ready to think about the future.
Separation
was central to the Herrins’ plans. The ideal age for dividing conjoined
twins is generally six to 12 months – old enough to withstand the
traumatic surgery but young enough that it leaves fewer psychological
scars – and the couple imagined that the girls would learn to walk with
one leg apiece, aided by prostheses.
“We knew that rehab would be
expensive and complicated,” Erin says. “But we’d found a family in
Seattle whose daughters had been through it, and they were doing
beautifully.”
In most respects, Kendra and Maliyah were good
candidates for the operation. For conjoined twins of their type, the
success rate is about 63 percent. But when Erin and Jake shared their
hopes with Dr Meyers, she gently discouraged them. No-one had ever tried
separating twins who depended on a single kidney, she explained. Such a
procedure would pose unprecedented challenges for Maliyah, who lacked
her own organ. If the girls were separated, she would need dialysis
until she recovered from the operation – and then a kidney transplant.
“I’d give both my kidneys if it would help her,” Erin said.
Dr
Meyers assured her one would be enough. “You might be the perfect
donor,” she said. “Unfortunately, that’s not an option right now.”
Infants did not do well on dialysis, and Maliyah’s body was too small to
accommodate an adult organ.
“When will she be big enough?” Jake
asked. The doctor’s answer made the couple’s hearts sink: “Let’s see how
she’s doing in four or five years.”
IF CARING FOR newborn twins
is challenging, handling two babies who share a lower body is even
harder. “Holding them, trying to balance their little heads, I was
overwhelmed,” says Erin.
Everyday tasks were daunting. The girls
required feeding tubes for several months. They had trouble sleeping
because one would roll onto the other or hit her with a flailing hand.
Strangers made cruel remarks. When either girl came down with a cold, so
did the other. They spent their first birthday in the ICU with
respiratory infections. During each crisis, Erin worried that she was
neglecting her older daughter, Courtney.
But the family adjusted.
Erin found a way to prop the twins in their crib so they slept better.
She made clothes by sewing pairs of dresses together. When the girls
could no longer fit in a regular car seat, the couple had a special one
built. Friends and relatives helped with chores and babysitting.
Before
long, the twins discovered they could get around by scooting on their
rear end. They learned to climb stairs, dress themselves, and jump on a
trampoline. One day, at age three, Kendra called to Erin, “Look at us,
Mum!” The girls had pulled themselves to a standing position – an
achievement doctors had said would be impossible without surgery.
By
then, the Herrins knew having the twins had been the right decision.
The couple had experienced a rocky patch after Courtney was born and had
even lived apart for a few weeks. Now they were closer than they’d ever
been. Says Jake: “We realised that Kendra and Maliyah had made us
stronger.”
AS THE GIRLS’ fourth
birthday approached, their parents looked forward to the day when each
could function on her own. But then came an event even more unlikely
than having conjoined twins: Like one mother in seven million, Erin
became pregnant with twins a second time. She couldn’t give a kidney to
Maliyah until she’d recovered from delivering Austin and Justin. (Others
had offered to donate, but Erin was the best match.)
She and Jake
began to have doubts about the surgery. Kendra and Maliyah were
learning to use a walker. They got along so well that their condition
sometimes seemed less a curse than a blessing. “I knew I’d miss bathing
them together, tucking them in together,” Erin says. “And they were
happy. I thought they were perfect the way they were.”
There was
also the trauma of the separation to consider. Dr Meyers assured the
couple that their daughters were strong enough to survive the initial
surgery. Afterwards, however, Maliyah would have to be on dialysis for
months before she recovered enough to receive her mother’s kidney. More
operations would be needed to reconstruct the twins’ bodies. Artificial
legs could help restore their mobility, but because the girls would not
have an upper leg bone, to which a standard prosthesis is typically
attached, the only devices available were crude and cumbersome. Was it
really fair – or necessary – to put them through all of this?
Dr
Meyers couldn’t say for sure. Still, she told Erin and Jake, inaction
carried its own risk. “So far, the girls have done fine on one kidney,”
she said. “But if they hit a major growth spurt, it could overtax the
organ.”
Torn, the couple prayed together. They consulted child
psychologists and medical ethicists. They sought advice from an internet
support group for parents of conjoined twins, with a dozen members in
the United States and Australia. Still, says Jake, “we felt alone – like
we were the only people in the world going through this.”
Although
the Herrins had never intended to burden the girls with the decision,
the twins wound up tipping the scales. “You mean I can be playing on the
computer while Maliyah plays with Barbies in the other room?” Kendra
asked one day when Erin raised the subject.
“And we can sleep in our own beds?” added Maliyah.
Erin nodded, and the twins giggled happily.
CUT-APART
DAY, as the girls called it, was scheduled for August 7, 2006. Two
months before the surgery, Kendra and Maliyah were admitted to Primary
Children’s, where doctors inserted balloon expanders into their torso,
filling them with a little more saline solution every week. The devices,
often used in reconstructive surgery, gradually stretched the girls’
skin so there would be enough to cover the tissue left exposed by the
separation. To ease the discomfort, the twins slept on a mattress filled
with soft sand.
Preparing them psychologically was equally
important. Erin made the girls a long paper chain so they could count
down to the big day. The hospital’s counsellors gave them each a pair of
dolls, sewn together, which they could separate when they felt ready.
Kendra cut hers apart right away; Maliyah waited until shortly before
the surgery.
At 7 am on August 7, the twins lay on a gurney as a
nurse wheeled them towards the operating room. They seemed calm, even
cheerful. Hospital staffers had decorated the corridor with
lift-the-flap posters celebrating the girls’ individuality – Who likes
caterpillars? Maliyah. Who likes butterflies? Kendra – and they stopped
the cart under each one, making the trip into a kind of scavenger hunt.
At the last moment, though, both twins broke down: “I don’t want to go!
Let us stay with you!”
Their parents stroked and soothed them
while hiding their own anxiety. “Letting them go,” says Erin, “was the
hardest thing I’ve ever done.”
“SEPARATING CONJOINED twins is
never standard,” says Dr Michael Matlak, one of the surgeons who
operated on the Herrin girls. No two sets of twins are joined in quite
the same way, and there’s always a chance that something will go fatally
wrong.
Kendra and Maliyah’s team included six surgeons, five
other specialists, and more than 25 nurses and technicians. With Dr
Meyers acting as director, they spent 16 hours dividing the girls’
torsos, rerouting their circulatory systems, and allotting each twin a
share of liver and intestines. Then, just after midnight, they split
into two teams – Maliyah’s led by Dr W. Bradford Rockwell, and Kendra’s
by Dr Matlak – to put each girl back together.
“My God, what have
we done?” Dr Matlak exclaimed when he saw the gaping fissures where the
twins had been connected. The paediatric surgeon had performed six
separations in the past, but he’d never encountered wounds as massive as
these. He wasn’t sure Kendra would have enough extra skin to cover the
chasm running half the length of her body.
His colleagues fell
silent, and Dr Matlak walked out to compose himself. In a nearby room,
he found the twins’ parents and other family members gathered. The
surgeon told them of his concerns for Kendra, and the group began to
pray. Dr Matlak returned to the operating room, his doubts allayed. “All
right,” he said as he prepared to move Kendra into an adjoining room.
“Let’s close her up.”
FOR THE NEXT ten hours, the two teams worked
simultaneously to rebuild each girl’s pelvis and abdominal wall. There
was enough extra skin to cover both girls’ incisions – in Kendra’s case,
just barely. At 9.30 the following morning, the twins slept in the ICU,
in separate beds for the first time. The nurses pushed their cots
together so that when they woke up, they could look at each other and
hold hands.
When the Herrins saw their daughters, they held each
other and wept. “Everything we’d gone through for the past five years
came rushing back,” says Jake. “It was such a powerful thing – like they
were born again.”
The surgeons were moved as well. Dr Matlak
retreated to an empty room, where he broke down in tears. “Joy and
gratitude just washed over me,” he recalls. Dr Meyers checked the girls’
vital signs; she was astonished to see that their blood pressure and
heart rates were still identical. “Twins have a special bond,” she said.
“There’s no doubt about that.”
Courtney, then six, was less
impressed with the outcome. When she saw her sisters in the hospital,
she cried, “Mummy and Daddy, why did you take them apart? I liked them
the way they were!”
THE TWINS’ ORDEAL wasn’t over. They stayed in
the hospital another 12 weeks. Maliyah underwent dialysis three days a
week, which often made her so ill that she had hallucinations. Kendra
needed surgery for an intestinal blockage. The skin around both twins’
incisions began to retract, requiring treatment with “wound vacs” to
suction away dead tissue and stimulate new growth.
By April 2007,
when Maliyah was ready to receive her mother’s kidney, the couple were
emotionally drained. “The girls had been to the brink of death and back,
and the whole family had gone with them. We had to make one last push,
but it was pretty hard for all of us,” Erin says.
The transplant
was successful, but only time could answer the question that haunted the
Herrins: Had all the twins’ suffering been worthwhile?
“KENDRA, HURRY!” Maliyah calls out, tapping at a keyboard in her parents’ study. “I’m sending you an email!”
Climbing
into a chair nearby, her twin logs on to another computer. “Dear
Kendra,” says the message in her inbox, “you’re my best friend. Love,
Maliyah.”
As she types a reply, Kendra glances towards her sister. “You can’t look yet,” she warns Maliyah. “It’s a secret.”
The
six-year-old twins need more surgeries to straighten their spines
(which formed a V when they were conjoined), but in most respects
they’re thriving. They’re busy with playdates and swimming lessons and
started Primary One in September. By early next year, their parents hope
to have them fitted with prosthetic legs. Meanwhile, the girls are
learning to use crutches, though Maliyah still prefers scooting around
on the floor.
The twins have not forgotten their conjoined days.
“Sometimes we still pretend we’re stuck together,” Kendra says. “But now
we can do more things.”
They can keep secrets from each other.
They can play hide-and-seek with their brothers and Courtney, who has
realised that her sisters’ separation actually adds to the fun. They can
decorate their own bedrooms and choose their own Halloween costumes.
“Little things like that have made a huge difference,” says Erin. “I
want them to grow up thinking that anything is possible.”
In one
important way, though, the girls haven’t changed. Some nights, when Erin
and Jake look in on them, they find that one twin has sneaked into the
other’s room. Kendra and Maliyah are cuddled together in the same bed –
side by side, as they’ve been from the start.
By Jim Plouffe
(Extract from Reader's Digest)