Conjoined Twins Erika and Eva Successfully Separated After 17-Hour Surgery

Conjoined twins (also known as Siamese twins) Erika and Eva Sandoval were successfully separated at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital in Stanford, California, after a 17-hour surgery. The two-year-old Sandoval sisters shared much of their lower body and “did very well,” according to lead surgeon Gary Hartman. The information shared was provided in a press release courtesy of the Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. Erika and Eva are now in stable condition in the pediatric intensive care unit, where they are expected to recover for about two weeks, the release about the surgery said. They will spend an additional two weeks in the hospital before they can go home, and are sharing a room, but are in separate beds. These photos and videos provided by the medical center show the twins’ progression from 2014 to the date of the surgery. When they were born, they were known as “thoraco-omphalo-ischiopagus twins,” meaning they were positioned facing each other and joined from the lower chest and
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