SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 8, 2006

Separated Twins Now In Separate Beds

4-Year-Old Sisters Had Shared One Kidney And One Pair Of Legs

  • Play CBS Video Video Conjoined Twins Separated

    Four-year-old conjoined twin girls can now lead separate lives. A 25-member surgical team successfully separated Kendra and Maliyah Herrin in a marathon operation. KUTV's Debbie Worthen reports.

  • Video Sisters Get A New Beginning

    Conjoined sisters in Salt Lake City are recovering from the surgery that separated them. Bill Whitaker reports on what happens next.

    • Dr. Rebecka Meyers, right, and Dr. Michael Matlak, second left, working to separate conjoined twins Kendra and Maliyah Herrin, at Primary Children's Medical Center, Aug. 7, 2006 in Salt Lake City.

      Dr. Rebecka Meyers, right, and Dr. Michael Matlak, second left, working to separate conjoined twins Kendra and Maliyah Herrin, at Primary Children's Medical Center, Aug. 7, 2006 in Salt Lake City.  (AP Photo/Aron Prigg)

    • The parents of Kendra and Maliyah Herrin, Jake and Erin Herrin, talk to reporters outside a Salt Lake City hospital after hearing that the separation surgery was a success, Aug. 8, 2006.

      The parents of Kendra and Maliyah Herrin, Jake and Erin Herrin, talk to reporters outside a Salt Lake City hospital after hearing that the separation surgery was a success, Aug. 8, 2006.  (AP Photo/Steve C. Wilson)

    • Kendra, right, and Maliyah Herrin play with conjoined twin dolls outside their hospital room at Primary Children's Medical Center in Salt Lake City, July 13, 2006.

      Kendra, right, and Maliyah Herrin play with conjoined twin dolls outside their hospital room at Primary Children's Medical Center in Salt Lake City, July 13, 2006.  (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac)

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(CBS/AP)  Swathed in gauze, twin sisters Kendra and Maliyah Herrin were rolled from the operating room and moved to separate beds for the first time in their lives Tuesday after 26 hours of surgery in which doctors separated the 4-year-olds and reconstructed their internal organs.

"When I was done with the operation and we were getting ready to take (Kendra) to the ICU, I got tears in my eyes, because they looked so good," pediatric surgeon Dr. Michael Matlak said.

The girls had been born in a perpetual hug, their little bodies fused at the midsection so that they were practically face-to-face. They shared a liver, a kidney, a pelvis, one set of legs and part of their intestines.

When separation surgery is performed, it's usually within the first year. CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker reports that with Kendra and Maliyah, their doctors and parents thought it best to wait until Maliyah was old enough to receive a kidney transplant from her mother. That surgery is to be performed in about six months.

Surgeons at Primary Children's Medical Center gave each girl one leg, split their liver and intestines and reconstructed their bladders and their pelvic rings.

Kendra kept their one functioning kidney, while Maliyah will be put on dialysis and receive one of her mother's kidneys in a transplant operation in three to six months.

Parents Jake and Erin Herrin, who also have a 6-year-old daughter and twin 14-month-old boys, had an emotional reunion with their daughters.

"There were happy tears and sad tears," hospital spokeswoman Bonnie Midget said.

The operation was believed to be the first time surgeons separated conjoined twins with a shared kidney, said Dr. Rebecka Meyers, chief pediatric surgeon at Primary Children's Medical Center.

Matlak was the first to cradle Kendra after separation, lifting her gently from the operating table to move her to another room for reconstruction surgery.

"It was a great moment," Matlak said. "In one sense, she was mine."

Matlak said he feared the gaping separation wound on the girls' bodies would be difficult to close. But tissue expanders placed in the twins weeks ago to grow their skin and muscles, combined with plastic surgery, made the job easier than expected, he said.

However, the days ahead will be tough. The girls are breathing with the assistance of ventilators, their bodies swollen from the hours of surgery and at risk for dangerous infections, Meyers said. They were swathed in gauze from chest to pelvis.

The twins are expected to remain in intensive care for about a week and recover in the hospital for at least a month before doctors can consider sending them home.

Conjoined twins occur about once in every 50,000 to 100,000 births. Only about 20 percent survive to become viable candidates for separation.

"It was hard to decide whether or not to separate them," Meyers said. "I feel good about the decision right now."



©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by aretta3 August 9, 2006 11:51 AM EDT
We all here in Asheville NC pray for the twin girls and "God" will take care of them and heal them and all of our prayers go out to the parents, remember stay strong and keep your faith with "God" and he will bring you through this hard time "God" bless you and your children amem..
Shirley Parton...
Reply to this comment
by aretta3 August 9, 2006 11:51 AM EDT
We all here in Asheville NC pray for the twin girls and "God" will take care of them and heal them and all of our prayers go out to the parents, remember stay strong and keep your faith with "God" and he will bring you through this hard time "God" bless you and your children amem..
Shirley Parton...
Reply to this comment
by aretta3 August 9, 2006 11:51 AM EDT
We all here in Asheville NC pray for the twin girls and "God" will take care of them and heal them and all of our prayers go out to the parents, remember stay strong and keep your faith with "God" and he will bring you through this hard time "God" bless you and your children amem..
Shirley Parton...
Reply to this comment

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