Siamese twins were separated a year after birth: this is how they look seven years later

Doctors separated these Siamese twins when they were only one year old

Their heads were fused, but the doctors took a risk and performed the surgery  It has now been almost seven years since then  Unfortunately, the girls were diagnosed with intellectual disabilities

One of the sisters can barely walk and does not speak, while the other can only stand for now  You can see how the sisters look today by following the link in the comments

In 2016, two girls were born in North Carolina – Abby and Erin. They were twins, but not ordinary ones. Their heads were fused. This was something that even medicine was afraid to handle. Yet, they were born. And they survived.

Their mother, Ann Delaney, learned about the diagnosis as early as the 11th week of pregnancy. The doctors were honest – they recommended abortion.

The term was short, but the problems ahead were enormous. Still, Ann did not want to.

At 27 weeks, she was hospitalized, hoping to carry the pregnancy to full term. But by 30 weeks, complications arose, and the doctors had to perform an emergency cesarean section.

The girls were born prematurely, small, helpless, and fused together.

The doctors said the girls had a chance – only 2% of such children survive birth and can be candidates for a separation surgery.

Incredible as it may seem, Abby and Erin were in that 2%. After months of observation, testing, and meetings, the doctors decided: the surgery could be performed. But the risks were enormous.

And so, Ann signed the consent form. With any outcome. The most important thing was to try to give each daughter her own fate.

On June 6, 2017, almost a year after their birth, the operation began. It lasted 11 hours. Erin was separated first – her connection was simpler.

With Abby, the doctors fought for every millimeter of tissue, for every blood vessel. The girls survived.

Five months later, Erin and Abby returned home. A new phase began – rehabilitation.

Today, seven years have passed since that fateful operation. Abby and Erin are alive. They are growing. But not everything was rosy. The girls were diagnosed with intellectual disabilities.

They do not speak, but they smile and enjoy playing with other children. They are socialized despite the diagnosis.

Erin learned to walk at the age of five. Abby can only stand for now, holding her mother’s hands, but she cannot move independently. The family hopes – slowly but surely, Abby will take her first step.

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