Posted on 12/22/2006 6:48:31 AM PST by kingattax
LONDON (AFP) - A British mother could get into the record books after she gave birth to twins and a single baby at the same time -- from two wombs -- in what is believed to be a world first.
Hannah Kersey, 23, gave birth to the rare triplets -- identical twins Ruby and Tilly, and singleton Gracie -- by Caesarean section seven weeks prematurely in September.
She was born with a condition called uterus didelphys, which means she developed two wombs, but doctors had warned her that she was unlikely to become pregnant in both.
After their early birth the triplets had to stay in hospital for nine weeks, but are now doing fine at home with Hanna and her partner Mick Faulkner, 23, in Devon in southwest England.
"We are just over the moon at how healthy and happy the girls are," she said. "They are three lovely and incredible children, all with very different personalities.
"Gracie seems to be the ringleader -- maybe because she grew up in her own womb. She is very determined and independent, always wanting her food before the others and to do things first," she said.
Doctors say there are only 70 women in the world known to have become pregnant in two wombs, and this is the first reported case of triplets.
"This is so rare you cannot put odds on it," said Ellis Downes, consultant obstetrician at Chase Farm Hospital in London. "I have never heard of this happening anywhere ever before - it is quite amazing.
"Women with two wombs have conceived a baby in each womb before but never twins in one and a singleton in the other. It is extremely unusual."
Good for her. She is upping the UK birth rate for this year.
And this reminds me that Barbara Hershey once made a movie called THE BABYMAKER and it was subtitled "Womb for Rent".
Never heard of this. I can only deal with one a month thank you. Whew!
I had threatened miscarriage with my first 3 pregnancies but was able to carry them to term, and then I subsequently had 4 early miscarriages, which may have been caused by the septum.
Evidently, conceiving is not a problem but early delivery is the usual complication.
She will need a husband, not just a partner to see that through for 20 years.
Indeed! I, too, noted the comment about the "partner". What is the matter with young women, both here and abroad, who elect to conceive a child outside of marriage? And then, when they finally do marry, it is usually to someone else andthey wanta huge, expensive, white wedding with their own children as part of the wedding party. I'm happy for them, but it's all so unseemly.
Thanks for the ping.
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