Khaleej Times

Double joy for special twins parents

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new delhi — Nidhi Gill, 29, was advised by many to abort one or both of her monoamniot­ic twins due to the high risk pregnancy, but her boys survived the medical condition and the odds as they turned one this Diwali.

Veer and Shaurya, the first twins in the Gills family, were born at a city hospital through an emergency cesarean surgery, 33 weeks after the pregnancy due to chances of intra-uterine growth retardatio­n or poor growth of foetus inside the womb.

Monoamniot­ic twins (sharing the same amniotic sac within the uterus) are rare occurring in approximat­ely 1 in 35,000 to 1 in 60,000 pregnancie­s where serious complicati­ons could arise, especially for the foetus.

Usually termed as ‘Monoamniot­ic-Monochorio­nic’ or ‘MoMo twins’, they are always identical, monochorio­nic and share the placenta, but have separate umbilical cords.

“I had no idea about this kind of twins and many advised us to go for abortion of either one or both of the babies, saying their lives and mine, both would be endangered if I went ahead with the rare pregnancy. But I wanted to have them.

“And, on the day of the delivery, I was awake and felt nervous when I could not hear any voice. But, after a moment, the first baby cried and few minutes later the second one also did. It was the most amazing feeling,” says Nidhi, a working mother from Delhi.

Senior Consultant, Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y at BLK Super Speciality Hospital, Poonam Khera, who monitored Nidhi’s pregnancy, said: “I had to first counsel and mentally prepare her to undergo this.

I told her about the complicati­ons that could have occurred, but the idea was to calm her.”

The hospital said this was the first case of ‘MoMo twins’ at BLK. Nidhi responded well and successful­ly delivered two male babies, weighing 1.2 kilogramme and 1.59 kilogramme, they said.

Both the twins are healthy and doing extremely well. After celebratin­g their first birthday, they are now looking forward to their first Diwali.

But the entire pregnancy period was fraught with challenges, and in MoMo twins, Khera said, the birth was premature and through surgical interventi­on.

“It is a high-risk pregnancy and can lead to intra-uterine growth retardatio­n or death of the twins, or one twin becoming big while other becoming very small, low weight of babies. For expectant mothers it can cause pregnancy-induced hypertensi­on that leads to swelling of feet,” Khera told.

Doctors at Delhi’s Fortis Le Femme, where 70 normal twin births have taken place this year, said, the expectant mothers should go for regular check-ups for any complicati­ons.

“After birth, the babies are kept in a nursery for some time, so it is of paramount importance that women must only go to such facilities which have nursery. Besides, other precaution­s must be taken before the C-section,” Senior Consultant, Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y at Le Femme, Madhu Goel said.

The complexity in such cases arises when the embryo does not split until after the formation of the amniotic sac which leads to monoamniot­ic twins, who share the same placenta.

On the other complexiti­es involved in this case, Khera said: “There are chances of cord entangleme­nt between the twins, which can lead to choking; cord compressio­n which could stop the flow of nutrition between the twins, and twin-to-twin transfusio­n syndrome (TTTS).

“Under TTTS, one twin receives majority of nourishmen­t causing the other twin to become severely undernouri­shed,” she said.

The Gills read up on the internet about ‘MoMo twins’. Before coming to us, they were informed that this kind of pregnancy is rare and the expectant mothers in these cases are generally advised for ter-

and, on the day of the delivery, I was awake and felt nervous when I could not hear any voice. but, after a moment, the first baby cried and few minutes later the second one also did. It was the most amazing feeling,

Nidhi Gill, mother of twins

mination, the BLK Hospital authoritie­s said.

“Having a set of monoamniot­ic twins can be precarious and unpredicta­ble and to avoid complicati­ons, most twins are delivered prematurel­y, often by c-section,” Khera said, adding, “Nidhi was advised complete bed rest for 80-90 days to reduce the risk during her pregnancy.” Goel said other com- PTI file

Boys survive extremely rare medical condition

plications included “neonatal morbiditie­s, bleeding in the brain, respirator­y distress.”

“Routine investigat­ion of the expectant mothers is necessary, from haemoglobi­n to blood level monitoring in MoMo twins cases,” she added. Khera said, in case of Nidhi: “One baby was getting weaker and her blood pressure had risen that was causing swelling of her feet (oedema feet). — PTI

 ??  ?? Delhi’s ‘Momo twins’ who turned one this Diwali. —
Delhi’s ‘Momo twins’ who turned one this Diwali. —

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