Surgeons at the pediatric department at Larissa General Hospital
in Athens
removed the fetus of an undeveloped twin from the stomach of a nine-year-old
girl. She came to the hospital complaining of terrible abdominal pains.
Surgeons examined the girl and removed a growth they later
found to be an embryo more than two inches long.
“They could see on the right side that her belly was
swollen, but they couldn’t suspect that this tumor would hide an embryo,” hospital
director Iakovos Brouskelis said, as quoted by the Associated Press.
The phenomenon, called “fetus in fetu,” is a very rare congenital
condition with a reported incidence of one in 500,000 live births. The condition
involves the presence of a fetus enveloped inside its twin.
Very early in a monozygotic twin pregnancy, in which both
fetuses share a common placenta, one fetus wraps around and envelops the other.
The enveloped twin becomes a parasite, in that its survival depends on the
survival of its host twin, by drawing on the host twin’s blood supply. The parasitic
twin has no brain and lacks some internal organs, and as such is usually unable
to survive on its own.
The condition causes the host to look pregnant and can occur
in both males and females.
According to Andreas Markou, head of the hospital’s
pediatric department, the removed embryo was a formed fetus with a head, hair
and eyes, but no brain or umbilical cord.
The girl, whose name has not been released, is expected to
make a full recovery.
Such rare cases always draw media attention. No further than
January this year a two-month-old baby girl in Medan
Indonesia
had a five-month-old fetus removed from her stomach.
However, the most popular case of fetus in fetu was
diagnosed in June 1999, when Sanju Bhagat from Nagpur, India
had his parasitic twin removed after he had carried him for 36 years inside his
body. His stomach was so swollen that he looked as if nine months pregnant and
he barely could breathe. He also made a full recovery after the surgery.
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