Rare ‘mono mono’ twins doing well
Associated Press
AKRON
A Northeast Ohio woman said Sunday her twin girls were doing well on Mother’s Day after being born with a rare condition.
Sarah Thistlethwaite said babies Jillian and Jenna were removed from ventilators Sunday afternoon after they were able to breathe comfortably. She told The Associated Press that she and her husband Bill both held them for a while on Mother’s Day.
“It’s just hard to put into words how amazing it feels to know the girls are OK,” she said. “It’s great to know that they’re doing so well, and being able to hold them.”
The identical twin girls shared the same amniotic sac and placenta. Such births are called monoamniotic, or “mono mono.” They were born Friday at Akron General Medical Center, grasping each other’s hands when doctors lifted them up for their parents to see after delivery.
Thistlethwaite had called that “the best Mother’s Day present ever,” reported the Akron Beacon Journal.
“They’re already best friends,” said Thistlethwaite, 32. “I can’t believe they were holding hands. That’s amazing.”
Jenna was born first at 4 pounds, 2 ounces and 17 inches, with Jillian following 48 seconds later at 3 pounds, 13 ounces and 17.5 inches.
They were moved temporarily to Akron Children’s Hospital because they needed breathing assistance. Thistlethwaite expects to be released from Akron General on Tuesday, though the girls will remain in the hospital two to four weeks.
Doctors say monoamniotic twins occur in about one of every 10,000 pregnancies. Dr. Melissa Mancuso helped deliver the twins, one of several amniotic pairs she has helped deliver in 11 years. She said the twins are at risk during pregnancy of entanglement of umbilical cords, which can cause death. Another woman at Akron General is expected to give birth later this week to monoamniotic twins.
Sarah and Bill Thistlethwaite of Orrville, Ohio, have a son, Jaxon, whose first birthday was Jan. 27. That’s the day they also found out she was carrying twins.
“All I could do was laugh,” said Bill, 35.
They rushed to prepare their home for the twins, and Sarah was soon on bed rest.
A middle-school math teacher, she went into the hospital March 14.
“It’s hard, it really is,” she said of extended bed rest. “It was very mentally challenging knowing I have to sit here all day.”
Besides television, books and “trashy gossip magazines,” she viewed YouTube to learn how to crochet baby hats.
The girls were born at 33 weeks and two days. Mancuso said there were only minor issues during the pregnancy.
Sometimes the girls would kick the monitors off.
“I don’t know what they’re doing to each other,” Sarah said jokingly of her “sweet girls.”