Miracle twins born 25 weeks apart

File photo: Babies born about 24 weeks into a pregnancy have a survival rate of about 50 percent.

File photo: Babies born about 24 weeks into a pregnancy have a survival rate of about 50 percent.

Published Apr 8, 2016

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Washington - The contractions began when Kristen Miller was attending a February church service.

By the time she got home, the Jefferson City, Tennessee, woman told NBC affiliate WBIR, her water had broken and she knew her baby was in trouble.

Miller was only 22 weeks pregnant at the time.”She called me hysterical,” her husband, Ian Miller, told WBIR.

Doctors were able to hold off delivery for more than two weeks, allowing baby Micah to remain unborn beyond 24 weeks, the earliest that doctors say a premature baby can survive outside the mother's womb. Surrounded by a small army of hospital staff, Micah arrived on Valentine's Day and weighed just over a pound (about .45kg), WBIR reported.

He was born one day past the 24-week mark, his parents told the station.

A premature birth would have been stressful enough on the Millers, but there was another serious complication to consider: Micah was not alone. He had a twin sister nestling inside his mother's womb.

Kristina Shumard, an obstetrician at UT Medical Centre specialising in maternal-fetal medicine, knew that the longer she could keep Micah's twin sister, Madelyn, inside her mother's womb, the healthier and safer the baby would be. And yet, when Micah was born, Shumard knew the odds weren't in Madelyn's favour. She expected Madelyn to arrive within an hour of her brother's birth.

The doctor was determined to delay Madelyn's birth as long as possible.

“Just because we're having one [baby] doesn't mean we have to have the second or the third,” Shumard said. “But it's hard to find the person who's a really good candidate.”

Delayed interval deliveries are rare and complicated affairs.

Babies born about 24 weeks into a pregnancy have a survival rate of about 50 percent and those who do survive are at risk for complications, according to Sabrina Craigo, the chief of maternal-fetal medicine at Tufts Medical Centre. Craigo, a Tufts Medical Centre news release explains, was involved in the birth of a pair of twins born 24 days apart in 2014. The release explained some of the challenges faced by the mother, the children and the doctors.

“This rare technique can only be performed with fraternal twins who have their own amniotic sac and don't share a placenta. Additionally, it's vital that the mother's contractions subside following the birth of the first baby for delayed interval delivery to be successful. 'I've seen two others in my career thus far, I think the longest interval between deliveries has been seven days at most,' Neonatalogist Gina Geis, MD said in an interview with WHDH-7.”

The release noted that Tufts doctors said that in most cases, only a few days separate delayed interval deliveries. Referring to the case in 2014, Errol Norwitz, chairman of the obstetrics department at Tufts, said it was the third case of a delayed interval birth he had seen in 25 years of practicing medicine. In the previous two pregnancies, he said, the first baby did not survive.

The Millers faced some of the same challenges, but luckily their twins had separate sacs and placentas. Doctors say that every single day of delay counts for a baby about 25 weeks old and that even one solid week can offer the child valuable health benefits.

“We said, 'Yes, if there's anything you can do to keep one of them in longer, we want to do that,'“ Ian Miller said. “They all said, 'Yes, it's possible,' and hinted that it was unlikely.”

Doctors demanded that Kristen Miller get strict bed rest and forbade her from even holding her newborn son for three weeks, according to WBIR.

Knowing that the odds were stacked against the Millers, UT Medical Centre director of obstetrics told the station, doctors cautiously attempted to provide the family with realistic expectations for success.

And yet, to everyone's surprise, director Kimberly Fortner said the mother “kept doing better each day.”

“And we just kind of all looked at each other and said, 'OK, another day it is,'“ Fortner said.

Five and a half tense weeks later, Madelyn was born.

Doctors told the couple that theirs was the longest interval delivery they could remember at UT Medical. The world record - twins born 87 days apart - was set in Ireland in 2012, according to the Irish Times.

“I don't know that we've broken national records, but it certainly felt like such a coup for all of us,” Fortner said. “It's been amazing and exciting!”

The Miller family will spend the next two months at the hospital as their twins grow healthier. Madelyn is breathing on her own and remains in the same room as her brother, WBIR reported.

“We feel so blessed to be here,” their mother said.

“The only thing that's gotten me through this... is to say, 'God is in control,'“ she noted.

Peter Holley is a general assignment reporter at The Washington Post.

Washington Post

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