Fifteen years later, the Alabama woman got a second shock: She's pregnant with twins, one in each uterus.
Kelsey Hatcher was
just 17 when she learned she had a double uterus.
Fifteen years
later, the Alabama woman got a second shock: She's pregnant with twins, one in
each uterus.
"I was having
some minor complications that led us to set up an OB appointment, and upon
examination and ultrasound, they discovered it," she said.
Known as uterus
didelphys, Hatcher’s condition affects only about 0.3% of the population,
according to Cleveland Clinic.
"Essentially,
the uteri are the size of one split in half."
Hatcher had her
first three children in "normal" pregnancies — Raelynn (6), River (4)
and Rhemy (2).
For her next
pregnancy, she was a little nervous going into the eight-week ultrasound.
"She smiled
and said yes, so I took a breath and relaxed. But I then told her, ‘I’m not
sure if it’s on my chart, but I do have a second uterus, just so you aren’t
alarmed.'"
The tech scanned
over to find the other uterus.
"She didn’t
even have a chance to speak before I blurted out, ‘Oh my goodness, there is
another one!’" she recalled.
Hatcher was
"in utter shock," she said.
"I blurted
out, ‘Oh my goodness, there is another one!’"
"All I could
do was laugh," she said. "I immediately called my husband, Caleb, to
tell him, as he was not at the appointment with me. He and I just laughed
together."
Hatcher’s doctors
were also in shock, she said, repeating how "rare and special" her
case was.
The odds of any
given woman having this type of pregnancy is about one in 50 million, as an
OB/GYN at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston told Scientific American.
Shweta Patel,
M.D., assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s
Department of OBGYN, who is also Hatcher’s obstetrician, described the
pregnancy as "very surprising."
"It's rare
enough to have a uterine didelphys, more commonly known as a double uterus, but
even more rare to have a pregnancy in each uterus," she told Fox News
Digital.
"I had to see
the images of the ultrasound myself to believe it."
Genetically, the
babies — both girls — fit the definition of fraternal twins.
"We just have
the added separation of different wombs," Hatcher said.
Twin pregnancies
ultrasound
Ultrasound photos
show the twin girls, who are each in their own uterus. (Caleb Shaver/Kelsey Hatcher)
"It is so
rare to have a pregnancy in each uterus that I am not sure that we know to call
it anything else but a twin pregnancy."
"There is
always a risk of preterm labor, miscarriage or uterine rupture if the baby goes
too long — but all of these things are a risk with any pregnancy," she
said.
So far in
Hatcher’s pregnancy, her prenatal care hasn’t been any different — "mostly
because I’ve had three successful deliveries previous to the twin
pregnancy," she noted.
Her third
trimester has been "a little more invasive," however, as it's being
co-managed by her regular obstetrician and the high-risk team.
"They are
mostly just watching the girls more closely, to make sure they are growing
properly and to discuss all our options for delivery," Hatcher said.
Patel agreed,
noting that the risks of having a twin pregnancy with one baby in each uterus
are similar to having a twin pregnancy in one uterus — for example, giving
birth prematurely, developing pre-eclampsia and bleeding after delivery.
"Kelsey has
had routine prenatal care for the most part, especially in the beginning of the
pregnancy," Patel told Fox News Digital.
"She will
need more frequent ultrasound and prenatal care visits in the third trimester
to monitor the babies, especially their growth."
"I have
complete faith that this delivery will be great and will continue to beat the
odds."
The current plan
is for Hatcher to have a natural, vaginal delivery.
"We believe
that because my body has done this three times before, it should be able to
deliver the twins in the same way," she said.
"There are
just so many factors that have to be considered."
Hatcher’s doctors
are allowing her to carry longer than most twin moms, in hopes that her body
will go into spontaneous labor — either in both uteruses or just one.
"They will
allow me to deliver one completely if only one side goes into labor, as long as
the other baby and I are well. Then they will start an induction for the second
baby," Hatcher said.
If neither uterus
goes into labor on its own, the plan is for Hatcher to be induced on Dec. 22.
A double Cesarean
delivery is the last resort.
"The most
unpredictable part is delivery," Patel said. "Do we deliver
vaginally? Do we deliver by C-section? Besides published case studies, there is
limited guidance."
"Ultimately,
with the help of our UAB maternal-fetal medicine colleagues and considering
Kelsey's wishes, we were able to make our recommendations."
Added Patel,
"It takes a team to take care of such a rare pregnancy, and I am grateful
that Kelsey is at UAB, where we can provide that interdisciplinary care."
"I’ve been
extremely blessed and grateful," Hatcher said of her experience.
"I’ve carried
all three of my previous babies to full term, two of the three even to 41
weeks," she went on.
"I have
complete faith that this delivery will be great and will continue to beat the
odds."
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