Patrick and Benjamin Binder: Difference between revisions

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'''Patrick and Benjamin Binder''' (born 1987-02-02) were [[conjoined twins]], joined at the head, born in [[Germany]], in early 1987, and separated in [[South Africa]], in January 1998.<ref name=Wapo2015-11-15/><ref name=BaltimoreSun1998-01-11/>  There were the first twins to be successfully separated by [[neurosurgeon]] [[Ben Carson]], of [[Baltimore, Maryland]].  For this operation Carson was able to prepare by studying a three dimensional computer model of the twins' anatomy.  Carson described this separation as the first of its kind, with 23 similar attempted separations ending in the death of one or both twins.
'''Patrick and Benjamin Binder''' (born 1987-02-02) were [[conjoined twins]], joined at the head, born in [[Germany]], in early 1987, and separated in [[South Africa]], in January 1998.<ref name=Wapo2015-11-15/><ref name=BaltimoreSun1998-01-11/>  There were the first twins to be successfully separated by [[neurosurgeon]] [[Ben Carson]], of [[Baltimore, Maryland]].  For this operation Carson was able to prepare by studying a three dimensional computer model of the twins' anatomy.  Carson described this separation as the first of its kind, with 23 similar attempted separations ending in the death of one or both twins.



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Patrick and Benjamin Binder (born 1987-02-02) were conjoined twins, joined at the head, born in Germany, in early 1987, and separated in South Africa, in January 1998.[1][2] There were the first twins to be successfully separated by neurosurgeon Ben Carson, of Baltimore, Maryland. For this operation Carson was able to prepare by studying a three dimensional computer model of the twins' anatomy. Carson described this separation as the first of its kind, with 23 similar attempted separations ending in the death of one or both twins.

Although Carson was able to separate the boys, they were both left profoundly disabled. The Associated Press reported, in 1989, two years after the separation that Patrick remained in a "vegetative state", following the surgery.[3] He never came out of his coma. According to a 2015 Washington Post article, he "died sometime in the last decade."[1]

Benjamin recovered to a certain extent.[3] The Washington Post reported that, Peter Parlagi, the boys' younger half-brother, said the boys' father was emotionally unable to ever handle them, or share in their care.[1] He said the boys father became an alcoholic, spent all the couple's funds, and left their mother destitute and alone. She was forced to institutionalize them.

In a 1993 interview, their mother, Theresia Binder, described guilt for agreeing to the operation that ruined the boys' prospect of ever having any quality of life.[1] According to the Washington Post's 2015 interview with Parlagi, Benjamin never learned to speak, or feed himself, but he does enjoy visitors, and being taken for walks.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Ben Terris, Stephanie Kirchner. The story of the surgery that made Ben Carson famous — and its complicated aftermath, Washington Post, 2015-11-15. Retrieved on 2016-01-31. “And although Carson and his team achieved something unprecedented, with long-term benefits for science, it did not result in a happy ending for the Binders.”
  2. Jonathon Kor. Parted twins' future bright Surgery: After a virtual reality rehearsal, a Johns Hopkins doctor leads the successful separation of Zambian joined-at-the-head twins, Baltimore Sun, 1998-01-11. Retrieved on 2016-01-31. “Carson's patients, Patrick and Benjamin Binder of Germany, survived with severe neurological deficits that left them institutionalized.”
  3. 3.0 3.1 Binder twins far from normal two years after surgery, Associated Press, 1989-06-26. Retrieved on 2016-01-31. “Patrick Binder remains in a vegetative state, said David Nichols, a Johns Hopkins Children's Center pediatric anesthesiologist who participated in the surgery and now directs the hospital's pediatric intensive care unit. Patrick's brother, Benjamin, is improving, but is clearly not normal and developmentally delayed, the doctor was quoted as saying in Monday's editions of The (Baltimore) Sun.”