A momo mom contacted me to say she had been in the news! She wrote this introduction and the news story and pictures are below! (source: http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=27924)
You're about to embark on a crazy, stressful and oftentimes scary
journey with a momo pregnancy. I was inpatient and delivered my twin
girls at a very reputable hospital and I was lucky to have wonderful,
experienced care. My best advice is to educate yourself and be your own
advocate. And remember, you're now part of a very exclusive momo-
mommy club! And we are all here to support you!
Palo Alto Online News, Uploaded: Friday, December 14, 2012, 10:34 AM
Rare monoamniotic twins delivered at Packard Hospital
Kate and Annie Carlson shared same amniotic sac
"A dramatic delivery at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital has saved the
lives of twin girls who might not have survived to their first
Christmas, the hospital has announced.
Kate and Annie Carlson were born Nov. 7, but they shared the same
amniotic sac in their mother's uterus, which is a rare and dangerous
condition, hospital officials said.
The twins, who were born to first-time parents Kevin and Allison Carlson
of Menlo Park, underwent an emergency cesarean delivery after their
umbilical cords had created a knot. The infants were only 30 weeks old,
10 weeks before a full 40-week term.
In normal twin pregnancies, a thin membrane forms to separate the twins;
less than 1 percent of U.S. twin pregnancies are monoamniotic. Cord
entanglement and compression and resulting blood flow problems kill 20
percent of twins with this diagnosis, hospital officials said.
Allison checked in to Packard in October as an inpatient. With no
membrane dividing the twins, Dr. Jane Chueh and her prenatal diagnosis
and therapy team balanced the risk of Kate and Annie being born
prematurely with the risk of a cord entanglement. Doctors delayed
delivery as long as possible to prevent the twins from developing lung
disease and other complications associated with prematurity.
The girls were tiny: Kate weighed just 3 pounds and Annie weighed three pounds, two ounces.
"It was a testimony to the skill of the obstetricians to allow the twins
to grow in the womb as much as they did, so that their lungs were able
to mature," said neonatologist Dr. William Rhine, whose team cared for
the twins in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
The twins could soon be released from the hospital and their parents have their room ready at home.
"We're really grateful. Despite the chaos surrounding our delivery and
pregnancy, Packard Children's really put us at ease with their
experience and expertise, and it's one of the best holiday gifts a
family could ever ask for," Kevin said. "
"Kevin and Allison Carlson with their twin daughters,
Kate and Annie, at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. The twin girls
were born Nov. 7, but they shared the same amniotic sac in their
mother's uterus, which is a rare and dangerous condition, hospital
officials said. Photo courtesy of Lucile Packard Children's Hospital."