Thursday, May 22, 2008

Surgery @ 19 weeks

My wife had the surgery on May 22 and it seemed to be a success. Both mom and babies recovered well after a 6 day hospital stay with daily ultrasounds. Before being released from the hospital we had a final ultrasound to verify that babies were still doing well and that the fluid levels were stable. At this ultrasound, baby A's fluid level was 2.25cm, and baby B's fluid level was in the 7cm range. The dopplers looked good and mom and babies were sent home to normal life until the next appointment the following week. Sam went back to work, trying to take it a little easier, but was extremely happy to be back to regular life.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Level II UltraSound Visit @ 19 weeks

The next couple of visits were nothing more than checking Doppler tones of the two fetuses and standard testing. Not very exciting reading, I know, but we did get scheduled for a Level II Ultrasound in Minneapolis at 19 weeks. This would be the first time we got see the babies since the first ultrasound at nine weeks. We did have a choice of which hospital to have this ultrasound done at, but if there were any complications we would more than likely be sent to Minneapolis. Sam and I thought it would be nice to become familiar with the hospital in case something should happen.

Our Level II exam started very well. We were pleased to hear that were having boys. The technician was encouraged by the size and the Doppler tones of Baby B. As he progressed through to Baby A he became very quiet and went about the exam. He concluded the exam and stated that the doctor would be in very shortly to speak with us. 30 minutes later, a doctor appeared and informed us that he thought our twins had the signs of Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome (TTTS). He explained what the syndrome was and if it was truly the case what our options would be. Our options were do nothing and wait an see what transpires, do serial amniocentesis, or have an experimental laser surgery to try to fix this condition. Now remember we are only at 19 weeks at this point and it is rare to be diagnosed this early. We knew we were having twins and that this is a disease that does affect twins, so we knew a little about it, but it only affects about 10% off identical twins, so it was more or less dismissed in our readings. The doctor was not ready to diagnose that this syndrome is actually present, so he asked us to come back the following day to follow up with a doctor who is more familiar with these types of cases. We were sent on our way with our heads spinning.

That night my wife and I did a lot of research on this syndrome and thanks to some great websites we learned that there were options and the risks with those options. Twin to Twin Transfusion Syndrome is an abnormality that causes an uneven flow of blood between two babies of an identical twin pregnancy through blood vessels that are present in the common placenta, resulting in a larger baby and a smaller baby. This occurs in about 10-15% of identical twin pregnancies for unknown reasons. (See links to the left).

The next morning we got our kids off to school, loaded up "The Minivan" with a small overnight bag for Sam just in case, and headed back to the cities not knowing what might become of our visit. This trip for us to the hospital is about an hour and a half each way, but it seems much farther when you are not sure what to expect. We met with a doctor who has extensively studied TTTS. He informed us that the fluid level in baby A (the donor baby) was 1.75cm and baby B (the recipient) was over 9cm, and that baby B was starting to show signs of heart distress. Baby A was also more than 15% smaller than baby B, and our stage of TTTS was estimated to be a 3. The Dr. went through our options again with more details, and gave us some percentages of survival rates of each option. We both quickly decided that our best option would be to have the Selective Laser Ablation surgery here in MN the very next day as we felt the urgency was necessary. Sam was then admitted to the hospital to be put on antibiotics before the surgery the next day.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Our 1st Doctor's Visit @ 9 weeks

We wasted no time to visit the Doctor's office once we discovered we were pregnant again. We wanted to make sure everything was going well so far. The Doctor understood our eagerness and did an ultrasound right in his exam room. The machine he was using a little older so the picture was not very clear. He scanned the belly and showed us our baby and said that the blinking light was the baby's heartbeat, but in corner of the scan there was another flashing light. Hmm?

I said, "Are we having twins?"

He said, "Thanks for stealing my thunder."
Shocked we were.

He then sent us to an off site facility to determine which type of twins we were having; identical or fraternal. It was discovered that we were having identical twins, because both babies were located in the same placenta, but with separate amniotic sacs (monochorionic/diamniotic). It was then that it really dawned on us that our family would soon be a family of 6! My wife seemed to take the news well, except for the fact that she would have to trade in our Jeep Cherokee for a much despised mini van!

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Our History Together

We have been reading quite a bit of blogs about Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome to get more information from people that have been through what we have been through. We are using this blog to get our story out there so maybe we can provide another account of a couples trials and tribulations as we are going through our own pregnancy.

Sam and I have been married a little more than a year. She is 29 years and I am 33. We each brought one great child into the relationship (both girls). Our oldest (Sam's child) is 10 years old and very mature for her age. My child is 7 years old and really is a typical kid. They both have been through too much for their young ages, but they really do love the family as we are. Nothing is cooler than gaining a sister about your own age.

This is our second attempt at getting pregnant as the first one lasted less than 12 weeks. We got pretty much the standard run around for three weeks as we waited to find out what was going on. We had our first ultrasound in the OBGYN's office and a second one at an off-site Ultrasound facility a week later. It took a third week to let us know that the pregnancy was ended as a result of a missed miscarriage. This was very difficult for my wife and I as we both really wanted to get have a child together and even nine months seemed too long to wait.

We were lucky to have a second opportunity at our first child together and wouldn't you know it, we were blessed with twins. Here is our story........