Skip to main content

Lady gives birth twice in one month!!! 😬😬😬

20-year-old lady gives birth twice in one month, this time twins

dailyactive


Bangladeshi has hit headlines for giving birth to twins just 4 weeks after giving birth to first child.

The 20-year-old gave birth 26 days after giving birth to her first child .

Arifa Sultana gave birth to a boy in late February, according to Dr. Sheila Poddar, a gynecologist at Ad-Din hospital in Dhaka. After a normal delivery, the mother and baby were released from a different Dhaka hospital.


Less than four weeks later, she was admitted to Ad-Din hospital.

“She came to the hospital complaining of lower abdominal pain,” Poddar said. Doctors performed an ultrasound and realized Sultana was pregnant with twins.

Sultana had two uteruses, a condition called uterus didelphys. Her first baby and the twins were conceived and grown in separate wombs.

Image result for uterus didelphys

“It is not very common to have two uteruses. When the uterus develops, it comes from two tubes, and those tubes fuse together .For some women, the fusion does not occur, and the dividing wall does not dissolve,” said Dr. S.N. Basu, head of obstetrics and gynecology at Max Healthcare hospital in New Delhi.

Uterus didelphys represents a uterine malformation where the uterus is present as a paired organ when the embryogenetic fusion of the MΓΌllerian ducts fails to occur. As a result, there is a double uterus with two separate cervices, and rarely a double vagina as well


Poddar was able to quickly perform a C-section to deliver twins: a boy and a girl. “All three children are safe and healthy,” Poddar said.


This follows a story of Kakamega woman who gave birth to quintuplets at once.

She hit headlines after giving birth to five healthy babies and doing just fine.

Comments

Most viewed

Do people with dementia behave the same way?

Reason people with dementia don't all behave the same by Medical Xpress People with dementia experience a range of psychological symptoms and behaviour changes. Credit: shutterstock.com Dementia is the is the leading cause of death among Australian women and the third most common cause of death among men. While dementia is not a normal part of ageing, the biggest risk factor for dementia is advancing age. Given ours is an ageing population, estimates suggest dementia cases are set to almost triple by 2050. Many people associate dementia with memory loss, so it may come as a surprise that dementia is a killer. So, what does it do to the body to make this happen? The brain is our control centre Everything we do is controlled by the brain. It generates the instructions that tell our body parts what to do, as well as facilitating our complex behaviours, such as personality and cognition (our ability to think, understand and do things). When a person has dementia, neuron...