Former conjoined boy starts walking
September 27, 2005 | 12:00am
WHITE PLAINS (AP) Clarence Aguirre, one of the conjoined Filipino twins who survived a long series of delicate surgeries to separate him from his brother, Carl, has begun walking, Montefiore Medical Center officials said.
Carl is expected to follow in his brothers footsteps soon.
Montefiore spokesman Steve Osborne confirmed Sunday that Clarence had begun walking on his own after "Dateline NBC" showed images of the three-year-old, wearing a helmet, taking steps at Blythedale Childrens Hospital in Valhalla.
Doctors planned to detail the milestone and issue a broad medical update on the twins at a news conference yesterday morning at the Childrens Hospital at Montefiore in the Bronx.
Clarences steps came about a year and a month after the climactic operation at Montefiore in which doctors separated the boys, who had been connected at the tops of their heads, by cutting through the small section of brain they shared.
Until then, Carl and Clarence had been unable to sit up, stand straight or see each others faces.
But they have progressed rapidly in almost all areas speech is an exception and by July Clarence was striding so energetically, while holding a therapists hand, that he once walked out of his pants and staffers had to find him a belt.
Doctors said the Aug. 4, 2004, separation was like a rebirth for the boys, who were in mortal danger throughout their infancy in the Philippines. Because they were limited to lying on their backs, their development was stunted and they were subjected to chronic pneumonia caused by inhaling food into their lungs.
The boys and their mother, Arlene Aguirre, came to New York in 2003 when Montefiore agreed to take the boys case for free and Blythedale agreed to donate housing and therapy.
Carl is expected to follow in his brothers footsteps soon.
Montefiore spokesman Steve Osborne confirmed Sunday that Clarence had begun walking on his own after "Dateline NBC" showed images of the three-year-old, wearing a helmet, taking steps at Blythedale Childrens Hospital in Valhalla.
Doctors planned to detail the milestone and issue a broad medical update on the twins at a news conference yesterday morning at the Childrens Hospital at Montefiore in the Bronx.
Clarences steps came about a year and a month after the climactic operation at Montefiore in which doctors separated the boys, who had been connected at the tops of their heads, by cutting through the small section of brain they shared.
Until then, Carl and Clarence had been unable to sit up, stand straight or see each others faces.
But they have progressed rapidly in almost all areas speech is an exception and by July Clarence was striding so energetically, while holding a therapists hand, that he once walked out of his pants and staffers had to find him a belt.
Doctors said the Aug. 4, 2004, separation was like a rebirth for the boys, who were in mortal danger throughout their infancy in the Philippines. Because they were limited to lying on their backs, their development was stunted and they were subjected to chronic pneumonia caused by inhaling food into their lungs.
The boys and their mother, Arlene Aguirre, came to New York in 2003 when Montefiore agreed to take the boys case for free and Blythedale agreed to donate housing and therapy.
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