The Daily Record reported. Only one in a million babies are born with the condition, and it meant that Ru’s left side did not get the same messages that the right side of his brain did.Rosalyn, a 34-year-old speech therapist from Stirling, said the only option was radical surgery to halve the brain and cut the connections between the two sides.Before the operation at The Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, Ru, who was just three months old, had up to 120 epileptic seizures a day.He was fed through a tube and was floppy and couldn’t focus.
Read more on dailystar.co.uk