The Facts Behind The Fiction Ap Ipdiap Wmap Gave Birth to Eleven Children - One Boy and Ten Women._Baby Cute

   

A supermom reportedly gave birth to eleven infants at the same time in Surat, India.

 

 

You correctly identified eleven newborns! Is this true, or is it just a photoshop-supported urban legend? Well, despite the fact that the image speaks for itself (and we all know how deceiving images can be), anonymous sources indicate that the eleven beautiful babies depicted above were born on November 11, 2011 (11/11/11).

Articles: INDIAN WOMEN GAVE BIRTH TO 11 CHILDREN IN SINGLE DELIVERY

Indian Woman Gives Birth to 11 Baby Boys | Snopes.com

Now, there is some truth to the eleven children's depiction. Six of them had been born as twins to the same mother. The remaining five infants, however, were born on a fortuitous day. However, wait a moment! It is claimed that the Guinness Book of World Records was contacted in an effort to recognize the nsred_e achievement, and that "unofficial sources" are prepared to provide additional evidence of the nsred_e birth of 11 offspring to the same mother.

No official news agency has been able to corroborate or refute the claim that a woman gave birth to eleven children during a single pregnancy. Let us therefore conduct a medical and logical analysis of the situation. Is it conceivable for a woman to carry and deliver 11 surviving infants from her womb?

Multiple births can occur naturally when a woman ovulates more than one egg per month and they are all fertilized, or when she produces only one egg but it divides immediately after fertilization, resulting in multiple births. As a result of infertility treatments such as In Vitro fertilization, multiple births are increasing in frequency. This refers to the procedure of "implanting" multiple fertile embryos into a woman's uterus in the hope that at least one will be accepted. In addition, fertility drugs can cause multiple egg ovulation and multiple deliveries.

 

 

Twins born months apart raise the same question: how is it possible?

As many of you are aware, sextuplets (six infants at one birth) are no longer uncommon. In fact, there are increasingly documented instances of mothers giving birth to six healthy children. However, what are your thoughts on having seven or more infants simultaneously?

In 1997, the United States reported the first incidence of urn-healthy septuplets documented by medsa. Three daughters and four sons were delivered weighing between 3 lb 4 oz and barely 15 oz.

Do you feel that seven is not impressive enough? How about eight neonates simultaneously?

In 1998, there were eight births in Houston, Texas. The first twin was born 15 weeks prematurely, while the other twins were kept in the uterus for an additional two weeks before being delivered by cesarean section. The smallest of them perished after only a week, but the other seven are still alive, robust, and enjoying life.

8 Years Later, See Pictures Of Woman Who Gave Birth To 8 Kids And The Children - Naija Super Fans

 

 

Separately, 'Octomom' Nadya Suleman, 45, who has a total of 14 children, took to Instagram on Tuesday evening to convey birthday wishes to the eight children she famously gave birth to via in vitro fertilization in 2009. Thankfully, they all grow very robustly.

No accounts of multiple births exceeding octuplets have happy endings to date. In 1999, a Malaysian woman broke the world record by giving birth to nine children. According to Saddy, all the neonates died within six hours.

An Australian woman carrying 12 embryos established a new world record for a natural pregnancy. Unfortunately, none of the choices were viable.

In 1971, a woman gave birth to at least fifteen children via multiple Caesarean sections. Sadly, all of the infants also succumbed.

Multiple pregnancies are typically associated with an increase in long-term medical expenses. And despite the fact that the infants survive birth, the facts indicate that a significant number of them suffer from a variety of conditions related to their crowded existence in the womb.