Decision due on conjoined twins

November 30th, 2008 by FendyBt2


Article Source: FendyBt2 Official Website


Conjoined twins Faith and Hope

Doctors will decide on Tuesday whether to operate and separate a pair of newly-born conjoined twins.

Laura Williams, 18, from Shrewsbury, Shropshire, gave birth to the girls, named Faith and Hope, at University College Hospital, London on Friday.

They are joined from their breastbone to their navel, so share a liver but have separate hearts.

Their mother told the Mail on Sunday that her babies, who are now at Great Ormond Street Hospital were “fighters”.

Mrs Williams has made medical history by becoming the world’s youngest mother of conjoined twins at the age of 18.

‘Beautiful’

She said the moment she first saw the girls, who were delivered by Caesarean section on Wednesday was “brilliant” and “amazing”.

She told the newspaper: “After I came round from the operation they wheeled me in to see them.

“They had tucked Hope’s arm underneath and it was Faith’s arm that I could see.

“I touched her and I took her hand and she was grasping it.

“They were both blowing little bubbles.

“They were so beautiful, I couldn’t stop looking at them. After everything everyone said, I’m so glad they’ve proved them all wrong.”

Mrs Williams and her husband Aled, from Anglesey, found out about their children’s condition after a routine 12-week scan.

"I prepared myself for the worst, just in case, but from the first time I felt them kick, I thought they were going to be OK"
Laura Williams

They were advised by doctors to have their daughters aborted but they refused to have a termination.

Mrs Williams said: “The night before the operation I couldn’t sleep. I prepared myself for the worst, just in case, but from the first time I felt them kick, I thought they were going to be OK. And they’re still here.

“They’re little fighters.”

Her husband said: “No words can describe it. I was so excited and happy and when I heard them screaming, it was like the world had lifted off my shoulders.

“The first thing I did was tell Laura they were all right and when I did, a single tear fell down her cheek.”

The twins were christened one hour later then put in an ambulance to Great Ormond Street – a leading European centre for the care of conjoined twins.

Mrs Williams said she was optimistic about her daughters’ chances of success.

‘Significant abnormalities’

“The only thing they share is the liver and as that’s the only major organ that can regenerate, the doctors can split it between the two of them and it will grow back, ” she said.

Nuffield Professor of paediatric surgery at the hospital, Agostino Pierro, said the children’s hearts had significant abnormalities that may need surgery.

He added: “The current concern is that the two hearts and the joined circulation raise a risk that the children might suddenly deteriorate and need emergency separation surgery.

He said surgeons would prefer to wait to operate on the children when they are older and stronger but they were beginning to believe that this may be risky.

“A meeting will be held on Tuesday to decide whether to attempt a planned separation this week, but it will be the parents who finally decide,” he said.

Conjoined twins are rare and take place at the rate of about one in 400,000 live births.

In 2001 a team of surgeons in Birmingham carried out a successful operation to separate Eman and Sanchia Mowatt, who were joined at the spine.<p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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Apple iPhone advert banned for ‘exaggerating’ its speed

November 26th, 2008 by FendyBt2


Article Source: FendyBt2 Official Website


Apple iPhone

An Apple iPhone advert has been banned by the advertising standards watchdog for exaggerating the phone’s speed.

The advert boasted the new 3G model was “really fast” and showed it loading internet pages in under a second.

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) upheld complaints by 17 people who said the TV advert had mislead them as to its speed.

Apple UK said it was comparing the 3G model with its 2G predecessor and its claims were “relative not absolute”.

The advert repeatedly stated that the phone was “really fast” and showed news pages and the Google maps service taking just fractions of a second to appear.

Text on the screen said: “Network performance will vary by location.”

After upholding the viewers’ complaints, the ASA said the advert must not appear again in the same form.

It said the advert was likely to lead viewers to believe that the device actually operated at or near to the speeds shown in the advert.

The watchdog concluded: “Because we understood that it did not, we concluded that the ad was likely to mislead.”

Apple said its claims were “relative rather than absolute in nature” – implying the 3G iPhone was “really fast” in comparison to the previous generation – and therefore the advert was not misleading.

The company also said the average consumer would realise the phone’s performance would vary – a point they said was made clear by the text stating “network performance will vary by location”.<p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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Miliband holds meeting in Lebanon

November 19th, 2008 by FendyBt2


Article Source: FendyBt2 Official Website


UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband and Lebanese foreign minister Fawzi Salloukh

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband has held talks with his Lebanese counterpart Fawzi Salloukh over the future of the Middle East.

Arriving in Beirut, Mr Miliband said it was “time to push for a comprehensive resolution” to the region’s troubles.

On Wednesday, he is due to hold talks Lebanese President Michel Suleiman and Prime Minister Fuad Saniora.

Earlier, he met Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus – the first British politician to do so since 2001.

Speaking afterwards at a joint news conference, Mr Miliband said Syria could play a “constructive role” in bringing stability to the Middle East.

Syrian foreign minister Walid al-Mua’allim said that Iran also had an important contribution to make.

“We believe that good ties with Iran will help the bring security and stability to the region,” he said.

Mr Miliband told reporters gathered at Beirut’s international airport that the UK was “very committed” to the “vision of a peaceful Middle East”.

“Now is the time to push for a comprehensive resolution,” he said.

The foreign secretary also announced that Lebanon’s president would visit the UK next spring.

Earlier in his tour, Mr Miliband travelled to Israel and the West Bank, holding meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. <P


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation


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