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Friday, May 24, 2013 | 10:49 a.m.

Posted: 8:04 a.m. Monday, Nov. 14, 2011

Formerly conjoined twins preparing to go home

KTVU

STANFORD, Calif. —

Formerly conjoined twins Angelica and Angelina Sabuco has been recovering from the separation surgery and should be released from Lucile Packard Children's Hospital later this week, hospital officials announced Monday.

“Angelica and Angelina are doing great—sleeping in separate beds, eating their favorite foods, and even taking their first steps,” said mother Ginady Sabuco. “For the first time, our girls will be going home in two separate car seats."

Doctors at the hospital said the little girls have been making steady recovery since their surgery

"We're very happy with their progress," said lead surgeon Gary Hartman. "Their liver function is normal, they’re no longer on pain medication, their appetites are growing; they’re almost ready to go home."

After the 10-hour surgery on November 1, which involved nearly a year of careful planning and involvement throughout the hospital, the identical twin sisters spent 6 days in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit.

Angelina was eased off of her sedation first, and then taken off a ventilator after 48 hours. Angelica followed closely behind, and was breathing on her own after 72 hours.  On November 7, the sisters were strong enough to graduate from intensive care to a regular hospital room, where they have been continuing their recovery.

Hospital officials said the girls were undergoing physical therapy and occupational therapy daily to build their strength, endurance, gross- and fine-motor skills.

  Each sister is also learning how to stand on her own without having the other sister as a counter-balance, doctors said. Angelina and Angelica are also being taught to walk forward, rather than sideways.

 Ginady, along with the twins’ dad Fidel, is excited to have them back at home, where a new double stroller and separate beds await—along with a whole new world of independence.

“I’ll see them weekly as outpatients for a while,” said Hartman, who noted that a plastic surgery team led by Dr. Peter Lorenz would also be seeing the twins for plastic surgery follow-up for their separation wound.

“We’re thrilled that they’ll now be able to run, play and enjoy very full lives as individual sisters,” said Hartman of his sixth successful conjoined twin separation. “And we think that after what they’ve been through, it’s safe to say that they will always be very, very close to each other.”

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