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Many of you have inquired about the progress of 16-month-old
conjoined twins Ahmed and Mohamed Ibrahim of Egypt since they
underwent intensive therapy at The Upledger Institute HealthPlex
Clinical Services September 16-20, 2002. It's been an incredible
odyssey to say the least -- and it isn't over yet.
During their week at UI HealthPlex, Ahmed and Mohamed showed
phenomenal improvements. Dr. Mamdouh Abou el-Hassan, the twins'
physician from Cairo, said, "I'm a physician of medical
practice. We are not usually convinced of this kind of therapy,
but when you see improvement with your own eyes, you can't
deny it."
We have to start by saying these boys are remarkable! It
takes about a second in their presence to be totally captivated
by their personalities. Their surgical team has dubbed Ahmed,
the larger and quieter of the two, "the philosopher"
and Mohamed, the smaller and more outgoing one, "rascal."
For all intents and purposes they're happy and well-adjusted.
They laugh, play, interact with those around them, and are
perfectly at ease in the spotlight.
Yet the surgery needed to separate them where they are conjoined
at the crown of the head has been called "one of the
most challenging decisions I've ever had to make" by
Dr. Kenneth Salyer, the lead surgeon and founder of the Dallas-based
World Craniofacial Foundation, which sponsored the twins'
trip to the United States. Unlike the recent case of the Guatemalan
girls who were successfully separated, Ahmed and Mohamed share
brain matter and extensive blood vessels, some of which snake
like a maze between the two.
It was because of the very complexity of the case that Dr.
UI was called to Dallas in August to evaluate the boys.
Dr. Salyer had learned about the effects of CranioSacral Therapy
from his wife, Luci Lara-Salyer, LMT, who studied CST through
the Institute. They both believed it might help to prepare
the twins for surgery.
Initial Evaluation in Dallas, August 2002
"I had never worked on or even seen conjoined twins
before," Dr. UI said. "I had no idea what
I was going to feel until I put my hands on them."
The twins' condition prior to their first CST session in
Dallas was not encouraging. The boys were subdued and the
smaller Mohamed was not eating or having bowel movements.
"It was like Ahmed was eating for both of them,"
Dr. UI said. "So the first step needed was to look
at all the physiological systems and decide from the feel
of things whether the systems were being controlled by the
larger twin or not. We could tell because there were two signature
energy patterns. So if we found both those signature energy
patterns in one heart, we knew that wasn't going to be a good
thing."
Fortunately, evaluation showed that not to be the case. The
degree at which the heads are conjoined caused flat spots
to form on the back of each twin's head. That area on Mohamed
was situated over the vagus nerve nucleus on his right side.
"That controls the stomach, gallbladder and liver,"
Dr. UI said. This, he believed, might explain why Mohamed
had not been eating.
Over the course of the next three days, Dr. UI, along
with Sally Fryer, a Dallas-based physical therapist certified
in CranioSacral Therapy, and therapists from her Integrative
Pediatric Therapy practice, worked with the twins up to an
hour and a half each day. With therapists positioned at the
twins' sacrums, Dr. UI worked on the juncture of the
boys' skulls to stimulate fluid flow and encourage decompression.
"I think they were motor-sluggish because of the compression
on each of their heads," Dr. UI said. "So
as I got a little bit of space in there, they started kind
of twisting their heads away from each other and responding
in their sensory systems a lot more, too."
The boys showed marked improvement. Prior to therapy "Ahmed
was weaker and more passive. And Mohamed was trying to get
up on his hands and knees and initiate rolling, but he couldn't,"
Fryer said. "By the end of their first CST session the
twins were smiling and playing with each other, imitating
sounds and overall much more animated." And about three
days after Dr. UI returned to Florida, Sally called
to tell him that Mohamed had started eating solid food and
having small bowel movements.
The Twins Travel to The Upledger Institute HealthPlex
Clinic for Intensive Therapy
The next step was to bring the twins to UI HealthPlex in
Florida to find out what further improvements could be made
if the boys were exposed to a week of intensive therapy with
a team of skilled CranioSacral Therapists. The goals were
to bring about as much independent functioning of their body
systems as possible and, most ambitiously, to encourage the
boys' bodies to begin a subtle separation where the vessels
are shared.
Therapy over the course of the week involved at least three
therapists working on the twins at any given time for a total
of approximately five hours per day. In addition to Dr. UI,
the team included 13 certified CranioSacral Therapists on
staff at UI HealthPlex and 12 visiting therapists.
Along with the skull work, the team concentrated on getting
each of the boy's systems functioning independently. Dr. UI
explained, "On the second or third day I decided we'd
do this system by system. We worked first on their livers
to make them independent from each other, then on their spleens,
their hearts, then their lungs. Then we went to their brains
and spinal cords and craniosacral systems. I think they did
very well."
Sally Fryer agreed, explaining that before CranioSacral Therapy,
"These little guys weren't babbling. They weren't eating.
They couldn't play with their feet. They couldn't pull themselves
into a crawling position. Since we started the CranioSacral
Therapy there has been dramatic change." After just one
day of the intensive therapy, for instance, Ahmed closed his
eyes completely while sleeping - something he had never done
before.
The Twins Return to Dallas
Since returning to Dallas, Ahmed and Mohamed have continued
to show progress through their sessions with Sally Fryer and
her staff, who have been working with the twins three times
a week for up to an hour and a half each time.
Ahmed and Mohamed are now standing with the aid of a therapy
ball. "They can bear weight on their feet," Fryer
reports. "They stand over the ball and push it with their
hands, and they rock back and forth. Both have become really
vigorous in activity and social interaction."
The decision whether or not to perform the separation surgery
has not yet been made. Surgeons are still weighing the feasibility
of surgery while they await the arrival of the twins' father,
who has the unwanted task of giving the ultimate yes or no
to the procedure. Should surgery be given the green light,
Dr. UI plans at least one visit to Dallas to help prepare
the twins for the procedure, and he has been invited to observe
the separation surgery itself. Even if surgery is ruled out,
however, he believes it is important to continue the therapy.

Dr. UI uses the gentle touch of CranioSacral Therapy
to encourage subtle
separation where the twins' vessels are shared. By the end
of the week,
greater cleavage was perceptible where the skulls are joined.

Mohamed (right), known as "rascal," enjoys a playful
moment with Naglaa, one
of the two Egyptian nurses who care for the boys, while Ahmed,
"the
philosopher," quietly contemplates his surroundings.

Dr. UI gets a high-five from Mohamed.
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