Sanju Bhagat’s stomach was once so swollen he looked nine months
pregnant and could barely breathe. Living in the city of Nagpur, India,
Bhagat said he’d felt self-conscious his whole life about his big belly.
But one night in June 1999, his problem erupted into something much
larger than cosmetic worry.
Mehta said that he can usually spot a tumor just after he begins an
operation. But while operating on Bhagat, Mehta saw something he had
never encountered. As he cut deeper into Bhagat’s stomach, gallons of
fluid spilled out — and then something extraordinary happened. “First,
one limb came out, then another limb came out. Then some part of
genitalia, then some part of hair, some limbs, jaws, limbs, hair.”
At
first glance, it may look as if Bhagat had given birth. Actually, Mehta
had removed the mutated body of Bhagat’s twin brother from his stomach.
Bhagat, they discovered, had one of the world’s most bizarre medical
conditions — fetus in fetu. It is an extremely rare abnormality that
occurs when a fetus gets trapped inside its twin.
The trapped
fetus can survive as a parasite even past birth by forming an umbilical
cordlike structure that leaches its twin’s blood supply until it grows
so large that it starts to harm the host, at which point doctors usually
intervene.
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