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» Two Headed Baby Girl Delivered In Katsina
The baby has also has a cleft palate and stunted fingers.
The 19-year-old Zainabu Dahiru gave birth to the baby with no eyes on Sunday night.
The
baby’s father, Malam Dahiru Umar, at his residence at Unguwar-Sodangi
in Malumfashi on Tuesday that the baby was born through normal delivery.
Umar, a 25-year-old petty trader, said the baby was their first and his wife attended regular ante-natal care during pregnancy.
He
said he burst into tears on sighting the baby and sympathetic hospital
workers told him that they could not offer any medical assistance beside
the delivery.
He said the workers informed him that his wife
was in stable condition and referred the baby to Ahmadu Bello University
Teaching Hospital, Shika, near, Zaria.
Umar appealed to government, wealthy individuals and non governmental organisation’s for support.
Meanwhile, effort to speak with Medical Director of the General Hospital failed.
However,
a paediatrician, Dr Ahmad Bala, who spoke to NAN, said the baby needed
maximum medical examination to ascertain the nature of the
abnormalities.
Bala said the medical examination would include
physical checks, X-ray and other diagnosis that would equipped a
physician to speak properly on the matter at hand and possible remedies.
NAN report that the new born baby and her mother were still at home.
When
shown the photograph of the baby, a gynaecologist at the Garki
Hospital, Abuja, Dr Kayode Obende, said the condition was called
encephacele.
According to Wikipedia, the free encycopaedia,
encephalocele is a neural tube defect characterised by sac-like
protrusions of the brain and the membranes that cover it through
openings in the skull. These defects are caused by failure of the neural
tube to close completely during fetal development.
Encephaloceles cause a groove down the middle of the skull, or between the forehead and nose, or on the back side of the skull.
The severity of encephalocele varies, depending on its location.
Encephaloceles occur rarely, at a rate of one per 5,000 live births worldwide.
Encephaloceles
of the back of the head are more common in Europe and North America,
while encephaloceles on the front of the head more frequently occur in
Southeast Asia, Africa, Malaysia, and Russia. Ethnic, genetic, and
environmental factors, as well as parental age, can all affect the
likelihood of encephaloceles.
The condition can occur in families with a family history of spina bifida.
Although
the exact cause is unknown, encephaloceles are caused by failure of the
neural tube to close completely during foetal development. Research has
indicated that teratogens (substances known to cause birth defects),
trypan blue (a stain used to colour dead tissues or cells blue), and
arsenic may damage the developing foetus and cause encephaloceles.
Proper
levels of folic acid have been shown to help prevent such defects when
taken before pregnancy, and early in pregnancy. It is recommended that
women who may become pregnant take 400 micrograms of folic acid daily.
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