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Two Babies, One Sac, More Risks
The Triumphs of Monoamniotic Twins
By Teri Brown
Janet Grant's 7-week ultrasound showed one healthy baby. The same technician at 20 weeks nonchalantly informed her she was having twins.
"I honestly thought she was joking, and this was just some sick sonographer's humor," says Grant, mother of five from Tallahassee, Fla. "My husband exclaimed, 'But you told us 13 weeks ago that there was only ONE!' She was so stunned that she'd missed twins at 7 weeks, she stopped the ultrasound then and there to go look for the old films."
Later that day, the technician tracked them down to tell the Grants that even knowing there was a second baby on the films, she still couldn't find it.
"I asked her if she could tell if they were identical or fraternal," says Grant. "I have identical twin brothers, so I was guessing that mine were, too. She simply said, 'I think they're identical. They look to be in the same sac.' I thought that all identicals were in the same sac. Wrong!"
Nancy Bowers, B.S.N., a registered nurse and author of The Multiple Pregnancy Sourcebook: Pregnancy and the First Days with Twins, Triplets, and More (McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Books, 2001), says that while monoamniotic twins are quite rare, there are a lot of risks involved.
"Because the fetuses share an amniotic sac, they are at high risk for many problems," says Bowers. "The most common and dangerous complication is cord entanglement. Monoamniotic twins are also at increased risk for birth defects. The mortality rate for such pregnancies is usually quoted as about 50 percent, but because of better monitoring, there have been better outcomes in recent years."
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