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vckums
04-06-2008, 08:50 PM
The parents of an Indian infant girl born with two faces say that she is eating and breathing normally despite having two pairs of eyes and lips and two noses.

The baby, who is yet to be named, was born to factory worker Vinod Kumar and his wife Sushma three weeks ago in northern India and has been drawing a stream of curious observers and others who consider her a deity in this deeply religious Hindu-majority country.

"I had never seen something like this in my life so naturally I was a little scared when I first saw her," her father said at the weekend at the family's mud-and-brick house in Noida town, about 50 kilometres (30 miles) northeast of New Delhi.

The girl has found easy acceptance in Kumar's large, extended family, who say they have no plans to consult doctors to check if the girl can receive treatment or corrective surgery.

"The doctor said everything is normal when she was born. So where's the need to get medical help?" said the child's father.

"She's fed through one mouth and sucks her thumb with the other. We use whichever mouth is free to feed her," the 24-year-old Kumar told AFP, adding she is eating and breathing normally.

Doctors said it was an extremely rare case, with the girl having two skulls joined together, and that separating them was out of the question.

"Since the heads are fused, separating them is not possible," paediatrician D.K Gupta of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences told the Hindustan Times newspaper on the weekend.

But doctors said the girl should be examined thoroughly to study the possibility of complications.

"Clearly the child is in no immediate danger but it has to be checked whether the oral and nasal cavity and other passages" are functioning properly, paediatrician Gupta said.

The case comes just months after Indian doctors performed a rare, marathon surgery to remove the extra limbs of a girl born with four arms and legs.

Two-year-old Lakshmi Tatma's case captivated the nation last year as domestic and international media focused on her complicated surgery performed in southern Bangalore city in November.

This year, Lakshmi started taking her first steps with the help of a baby walker, delighting her parents and doctors.

Lakshmi, named after the four-armed Hindu goddess of wealth, was born fused to the pelvis of a twin that had stopped developing in her mother's womb -- a condition that occurs once in 50,000 conjoined twin births.

Kumar said he had heard about Lakshmi, but did not want to change anything about his daughter's features.

"Whatever God has given me is acceptable. What can we do about it?" he said, lifting the baby to take her away after allowing a brief glimpse of her as neighbours crowded around her cot.

"This child is very special to us," the baby's grandfather chimed in, gazing lovingly at the infant.


Picture here
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080406/hl ... hindiababy (http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080406/hl_afp/healthindiababy)

Dragonfire
04-06-2008, 09:13 PM
there must be little pollution's laws in place in India, babies with 2 faces, 4 legs I'm afraid to ask whats next.

vckums
04-06-2008, 09:41 PM
I thought of the last baby that had a deformity when I read this. She was thought of as a goddess though right?

Yo Mama
04-06-2008, 10:08 PM
Well, yeah, so's this one, but that doesn't make what's going on in India right.

From what I've been hearing lots of plastic is produced in India. Probably a whole lot of other things that cause heavy industrial pollution.

Just a quick googling reveals:


Poisonous industrial sites in India, China and the former Soviet Union topped a new ranking this week of the world's most polluted places, where millions of people are threatened by toxic chemicals, a US-based environment watchdog said.

The lead production base of Tianying, eastern China and the industrial town of Vapi, India were among new additions to the top 10 list of "worst polluted places" by the Blacksmith Institute in New York and the environmental clean-up group Green Cross Switzerland.

"Mining, Cold War era legacy pollution and unregulated industrial production are the major culprits behind the pollution identified by the Blacksmith Institute report," the group said in a statement.

Vapi "exemplifies a region overwhelmed by industrial estates - more than 50 poison the local soils and groundwater with pesticides, PCBs (carcinogenic chemicals), chromium, mercury, lead, and cadmium."

Source (http://www.news24.com/News24/Technology/News/0,,2-13-1443_2184861,00.html)

And from an Indian site:


Ali Raj is one of the hundreds of fishermen rendered jobless due the heavy industrial pollution of the Periyar, the largest river in Kerala. The Eloor-Edayar region, about 20 km from where the river meets the Arabian Sea, is the industrial hub of Kochi, the commercial capital of Kerala and is home to Kerala�s largest industrial cluster, the Udyogamandal Industrial Estate. There are about 250 industries including the prominent ones like Fertilizers and Chemicals Travancore Ltd. (FACT), Hindustan Insecticides Ltd (HIL), Indian Rare Earths Ltd etc., mainly chemical ones, in this small area. They manufacture a range of chemicals--petrochemical products, pesticides, rare-earth elements, rubber processing chemicals, fertilisers, zinc/chrome products and leather products. Many of these industries are 50 years old and employ highly polluting technologies. The industries take large amounts of fresh water from the Periyar and in turn discharge concentrated toxic effluents after little treatment. This has led to large-scale destruction of fish in the river and has done extensive damage to the paddy fields and other farmlands in the region.

Source (http://www.indiatogether.org/2004/mar/env-periyar.htm)

From the same article:


The study �Status of Human Health at Eloor Industrial Estate, Kerala�, points out that in comparison to the less polluted Pindimana village on the banks of the same river in the same district, the chances that residents of Eloor Gram Panchayat will contract Cancer are 2.85 times higher. Children are 2.63 times at higher risk of malformation due to congenital and Chromosomal aberrations. Chances that children may die due to birth defects have increased 3.8 times higher. Death due to Bronchitis at Eloor is up by 3.4 times. Deaths due to Asthma are up by 2.2 times.

Considering India has a billion people, it's no wonder that these things seem to turn up there more than elsewhere. They are heavily polluted, unregulated, and have a much higher birth rate than other countries which would increase the rates of birth defects such as these.

vckums
04-07-2008, 01:52 AM
I figured it was bad, but didn't realize it was that bad.

Iori Komei
04-07-2008, 03:14 AM
I wonder if she'll be a good liar, then she can be two faced physically and otherwise.

Ok, that was not nice, sorry.


The level at which this anomaly has progressed is pretty amazing IMO, I mean normally with these kind of things you have the normal one and a hideously deformed secondary one, yet in this case both have formed to look normal, well as normal as two faces on one head can look anyways.

Boondock
04-07-2008, 10:43 AM
cute little bugger

GhostOfCaptSpaulding
04-07-2008, 03:47 PM
It'll be tough to sneak up on her, too. :D

Boondock
04-08-2008, 11:53 AM
it would be cool if it has seperate vocal chords and could say different things at the same time. it could sing lead and backup at the same time and revolutionize the industry.

vckums
04-08-2008, 12:47 PM
It'll be tough to sneak up on her, too. :D

Oh that was so wrong, but I laughed. LOL