In most cases yes, but it also depends on how they are joined, if they share organs etc and in that case what organs.
Absolutely.
cFuck you
Yes, he was the lead surgeon separating the Binder twins in 1987.
Yes, Ben Carson continued to perform groundbreaking surgeries throughout his career. One of his most notable surgeries was separating craniopagus twins, Patrick and Benjamin Binder, in 1987. This surgery established him as a pioneer in the field of pediatric neurosurgery.
basically you get to babies that look alike and you put them by each other plait there hair together take a strand of each of there hair and then you send it off to a science lab they give you a chemical which you drink and then you give birth to twins!
basically you get to babies that look alike and you put them by each other plait there hair together take a strand of each of there hair and then you send it off to a science lab they give you a chemical which you drink and then you give birth to twins!
i think you mean conjoined twins. These specials twins are joined together sideways when they were born, and it will need a surgery to get them apart.
He separated 2 twins that was stuck together and the surgery was very risky.
cause maybe one might die and the other will die
Dr. Ben Carson, Dr. James Goodrich, and Dr. Henri Ford are famous surgeons who have successfully separated conjoined twins in various medical cases. Their expertise and skill in these complex surgeries have made significant impacts in the field of pediatric surgery.
yes they are... simmes twins form from one egg that is in the process of separating into two eggs or identical twins... but the process isn't finished and that is why they are "stuck together"
Dr. C. Everett Koop was the first surgeon to successfully separate conjoined twins in 1956. The twins were conjoined at the abdomen and were named Patrick and Benjamin Binder. The surgery was performed at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.