
Dec 5, 2007 5:54 pm US/Central
Doctors Deliver Triplets, Quads In 24 Hours
NEW ORLEANS (AP) ―
The newborn intensive care unit at one area hospital got a sudden
infusion of infants: triplet boys and quadruplet girls delivered within
24 hours of each other.
Molly, Elizabeth, Margaret and Carolyn
Murphy and their mother, Alisha Murphy, and Linus, Oliver and Miles
Kocke and their mother, Pamela Kocke, all were doing well Wednesday,
according to a news release from Ochsner Medical Center.
The boys' births started about 6:45 a.m. Tuesday, and the girls began showing up just under 12 hours later, at 6:24 p.m.
"The
trips were natural," hospital spokeswoman Katherine Voss said in an
interview. The odds of naturally born triplets are about one in 8,000.
Voss said Matt and Alisha Murphy's daughters were conceived by in vitro fertilization.
Ultrasound
early during the pregnancy found that two of the girls are identical
twins, indicating that one of three fertilized eggs split after it was
implanted, said her obstetrician, Dr. Sherri Longo. She didn't know
which two are identical.
The girls weigh 3 pounds 6 ounces to 4 pounds 3 ounces.
The
boys' weights range from 4 pounds 2 1/2 ounces to 4 pounds 10 ounces.
Doctors won't know if any of them are identical until they get lab
results from the babies' placentas, Voss said.
All of the babies will stay in the neonatal ICU for a few weeks _ standard for premature babies.
The
average gestation for triplets is 33 weeks, and that for quadruplets 29
1/2 weeks. The boys were delivered at 33 weeks and two days, and the
girls at 32 weeks.
Babies born after 37 weeks' gestation are considered full term.
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