Angela Formosa was taken aback when she discovered that the twins she was carrying had the same intestines.
However, English doctors were able to perform a miracle: the newborn Siamese twins were successfully separated.

The physicians informed me right away that the two fetuses were quite close to one another.
The twins joined between the sixteenth and twenieth weeks of my pregnancy, according to a specific scan I received.
“I can’t even begin to tell you how shocked and terrified I was,” Angela Formosa says.

The physicians informed me right away that the two fetuses were quite close to one another.
The twins joined between the sixteenth and twentieth weeks of my pregnancy, according to a specific scan I received.
“I can’t even begin to tell you how shocked and terrified I was,” Angela Formosa says.

The kids will undergo surgery to be separated by pediatric surgeons Agostino Pierro and
Edward Keely from Great Ormond Street Hospital, one of the premier facilities for treating Siamese twins.
There is a little chance that the babies would survive, as the experts swiftly advised.
Doctors decided that the kids needed to be delivered one month early so
that they would still have a remote chance of survival.

When Rosie and Rabi were born, it was discovered that their intestines were connected at the navel and shared a non-functioning section.
The neonates arrived at the operating table a few hours after delivery because they required emergency surgery.
Despite the fact that there was no guarantee that the baby girls would survive, the physicians did the unthinkable.
“We are delighted with the treatment’s success. “, remarked Professor Pierrot.

The children will require care in the future, but we anticipate they will be able to live normal, happy lives.”
Rosie and Rabi, two 12-week-old infants, were saved, and their parents are relieved that they may now live at home calmly.

Angela reports that they are developing and doing well. They are normal, boisterous children who smirk and scream when upset.