The mother said that doctors told her Poppy saved her sister's life and that if they had waited longer to deliver the girls, Winnie would not have made it.
Twins always share a special bond. They start their lives together from their mother's womb and are known to be each others' best friends till death. One can't bear to see the other in trouble and go to great lengths to protect them. Maybe that's why Poppy McBride sent out distress signals from the womb upon seeing her sister struggle, leading the doctors to deliver them early and save her life.
Leah McBride and her husband, Austin, 27, a crane mechanic, were excited to have twins in January 2019. But at 21 weeks, the doctors told them that their girls had a twin-to-twin transfusion, in which there is an imbalance of blood flow. It makes one baby a donor and the other the recipient of all the nutrients, according to WalesOnline.
There was a 48% difference in the sizes of both children. Leah said that she was advised to terminate Poppy in order to give her other daughter a better chance of survival as the doctors "were worried that Poppy would have a heart attack as she was passing all the nutrients to Winnie and they thought Winnie might have a stroke."
But Leah didn't want to choose one baby over the other. So she decided to get a second opinion. She went to Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston and the doctors suggested surgery to steady the blood imbalance. It was successful.
However, her water broke at 27 weeks and since the doctors thought it was too early for the delivery, they tried to delay it using steroids. "We needed to buy as much time as possible because 28 weeks was still too early to deliver them safely," Leah said.
At 31 weeks, Poppy's heart rate dipped and showed no signs of improving, forcing the doctors to deliver both kids. They were born on May 24, 2019. Doctors were surprised to find that Poppy, despite being smaller than her twin at 1lb 11oz, was perfectly healthy. However, her sister Winnie—who weighed 3lb 8oz—was not. She was born with underdeveloped lungs and had to be taken to the intensive care unit.
Leah revealed that doctors told her Poppy saved her sister's life and that if they had waited longer to deliver the twins, Winnie would not have made it. Winnie had to go through brain surgery at 14 days old to remove fluid build-up and she has recovered well after it.
Twin baby 'sent out distress signal' in womb and saved poorly sister's life - CoventryLive - https://t.co/r4z6lYea3P
— TV Twins UK (@tvtwinsuk) November 25, 2022
McBride who is from Lake Jackson, Texas, said: "Our doctors told us, 'I think your tiny twin saved her sister's life.' Poppy's heart rate had been all over the place, so they had to deliver, but when she was born, she was completely fine." The doctors believe she sent out the distress signals because she knew her sister wouldn't survive unless she was delivered soon. Leah added, "Even now Poppy takes care of Winnie, though she is still much smaller." The doctors called Poppy "feisty but she was smaller than an elf on the shelf," the proud mom shared. Both girls are now doing great. Leah said that they are "smart as they can be" and that Winnie can "read books from memory at 3." They are also very close to each other. When Leah tried to move their beds apart, "they weren't having it," she revealed.
“A pair of twins suffering from twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) survived — because one of the twins sent what doctors called a ‘distress signal’ from inside the womb, saving her sister’s life.”@LiveActionNews. 🔽https://t.co/ELfpVlHH4v#PreemieStrong #NICUBaby
— Life Issues Institute (@LifeIssuesUSA) December 3, 2022
This article originally appeared 2 years ago.