Cojoined twin sisters who were famously ‘cut In half’ in 2006 are now living as separate teenagers

The twins Kendra and Maliyah Herrin arrived to the world on February 26, 2002.

Their parents, Erin and Jake, were happy that their beloved daughters had finally seen the light of day.

At the same time, they were faced with a life-changing, difficult decision.

Kendra Deene Herrin and Maliyah Mae Herrin were born on February 26, 2002, in Salt Lake City, Utah.

The sisters came into the world as a rare set of Ischiopagus/Omphalopagus conjoined twins and were sharing a large intestine, bladder, liver, and single kidney.

Kendra and Maliyah were connected at the abdomen and pelvis and shared numerous vital organs and one pair of legs.

Early on, the parents Erin and Jake knew that separating them was going to be incredibly risky.

Doctors told the parents that their girls didn’t have the organs needed to survive on their own outside of Erin’s womb.

Leading up to their birth, doctors were unsure that they’d survive their first weeks.

When Erin was still pregnant, she was advised to abort the twins altogether.

“Another doctor told us to simply abort the twins because it was all too complicated. But I’d seen our daughters’ faces close up, at an MRI scan, and fallen in love with them,” said Erin.

Whether it would happen in a day or several years into the future, Kendra and Maliyah were bound to face life-threatening health problems as they grew up.

As the girls grew up, Erin and Jake were finally faced with that difficult and life-changing dilemma – either keep the girls conjoined or attempt an extremely risky separation surgery.

A successful separation promised a higher likelihood of survival into adulthood, but the operation also came with a risk of losing either one or both of their daughters.

The biggest medical issue facing Kendra and Maliyah was their shared kidney.

According to statistics, only 75 percent of surgical separations result is at least one twin surviving.

But Kendra and Maliyah Herrin have been defying the odds their entire lives.

After several tests and screenings, doctors decided that a possible surgery would involve Kendra retaining the kidney, and Maliyah needing a transplant.

However, kidney transplants are typically impossible in infants, Kendra and Maliyah would need to wait until they were four years old to undergo surgery if doctors wanted to go down that route.

After a lot of thinking, Erin and Jake agreed to go through with the operation. All they had to do after that was wait until their daughters were old enough.

On August 7, 2006, six experienced surgeons worked together on the Kendra and Maliyah’s separation surgery.

Thank god, both twins were able to pull through following their long and grueling operations.

Once the girls were stabilized, Jake and Erin turned to the public, who had been closely following the Herrin’s dramatic story.

“Everything is going as well as we could hope and pray for. Prayers are working,” said Jake.

“They’ve given us courage we didn’t realize 4-year-olds could possess”, Erin added.

Kendra and Maliyah were the first set of conjoined twins to be separated to share a kidney.

But even though the surgery was successful, the twins still had a long road of rehabilitation ahead of them. For example, both twins needed to have their bandages changed three times a week.

Putting on new bandages and taking off the old ones took two hours for each sister. Because each sister was left with one leg after surgery, they needed to learn how to move from scratch.

Also, Maliyah required special care and three dialysis sessions per week.

Soon, however, everyone realized that the twins’ miraculous recovery story was something out of the ordinary.

When Erin was told Maliyah needed a new kidney, she did not hesitate for one second.

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