In extremely rare case, doctors remove fetus from brain of 1-year-old

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In extremely rare case, doctors remove fetus from brain of 1-year-old​


A young child had the remnants of her absorbed twin removed from her head.

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Doctors found a malformed fetus in an infant's brain. (These brain scans are stock images and not from the case report described below.)

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Brain Scans and Fetus Removed From Brain. (Spoilered due to nature of image.)

In an extremely rare case, doctors surgically removed a fetus from the brain of a 1-year-old child. Doctors found the fetus after the child showed delayed motor skill development, an enlarged head circumference and a buildup of fluid in the brain.

The report, published Dec. 12, 2022, in the journal Neurology, noted that the mass in the young child's head was a "malformed monochorionic diamniotic twin," meaning in the womb, the fetuses had once shared the same placenta but had separate amniotic sacs, the thin-walled, liquid-filled sacs that surround fetuses as they develop. These types of twins come from the same fertilized egg, meaning they're identical.

The anomaly in which one fetus becomes enveloped by another is known as "fetus in fetu," or sometimes "parasitic twin." The absorbed twin typically stops developing while the other continues to grow, the Miami Herald reported.

The phenomenon occurs in an estimated 1 in 500,000 live births; usually, the malformed fetus appears as a mass in the other fetus's abdomen, wedged behind the tissues that line the abdominal wall. However, in this case, the mass appeared in the "host" fetus's head, and likely arose very, very early in development, at the stage when the fertilized egg forms a cluster of cells called a blastocyst.

Brain scans of the 1-year-old child's head revealed that the fetus contained a vertebral column and two leg bones (the femur and tibia), and that the malformed fetus had spina bifida, a condition in which part of the spinal cord is exposed, rather than covered by tissues of the back, due to a problem during development. Once removed, the fetal mass was also determined to have "upper limb and finger-like buds."

The brief case report does not include details of the 1-year-old's condition following surgery.
 
Young children, especially those under the age of 4 or 5, can recover from brain damage exceptionally well. This kid should make a full recovery.

There is even a procedure where half of the brain is removed from children to treat epilepsy and they make a full recovery.
Would not call it a full recovery. They will always have some form of hemiplegia and depending on the side of brain removed some deficits in other areas.
 
Can we stop turning this thread into abortion sperging and talk about the scientific implications of this whole thing instead. This is a very interesting article and yet you are all acting like retards instead.
Was able to track down another article from 2012 about Intracranular Fetu in Fetu if you wanted to read something more indepth. It links to other articles as well.
 

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will be interesting to see what function the kid regains as they grow. Remember the case of the civil servant with almost no brain (the jokes write themselves yes but this is fascinating.)
Man goes to doc with weakensss in leg. Brain scan reveals he only has a thin layer of brain tissue and clearly has been like that a long time. He’d been an employed civil servant holding down a job and was considered mentally normal.
Or the student with a 126 IQ with a tiny brain?
The child may end up more or less ok, or very impaired. Brains are extremely weird
 
Christ, that's got to hurt to have that stabbing your brain.
Nah, the brain doesn't have any pain receptors.

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Today I learned 'insult' can mean 'an event that causes damage to organs or tissue.' I was both confused and impressed by the choice of words at first.

Does it say anything about whether it was alive before or after the removal? Or was it just growing like one of them weird tumour babies.

My first thought when I read the article title was Beelzebub, the conjoined twin from basketcase.
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Really hope the kid manages to grow normally and her mental functions aren't too impaired.
 
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None of you fuckers actually posted pics of what was removed from the baby:


The baby is alive and well which is incredibly fucking amazing considering...
If I was that family, I'd ask if I could keep the specimen in a jar or something.
That image was in the OP, btw.
 
It's this kind of body horror that keeps me up at night. What if I have a male twin inside me? Does that make me gay?
You post on kiwifarms so the jury is out on that one.

If I was that family, I'd ask if I could keep the specimen in a jar or something.
Idk, seems like something horrifying to keep around your house. Some people do have a desire to pickle the organs they have to get removed for one reason or another but imagine going through a closet one day looking for something, stumbling upon the jarred specimen, and then finding out it was your identical twin that was taking up real estate in your skull next to your brain.
 
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