Hello Friends!
I rejoice with the happy mother and thnk God for her her and her babies.
However long it lasts, labour is a gruelling affair. So spare a thought for Joanna Krzysztonek, who endured an astonishing 75 days of it. And as if that wasn't challenging enough, the 31-year-old was forced to lie upside down for the entire time.
Mrs Krzysztonek was pregnant with triplets when she went into labour at 21 weeks. Her first baby was born prematurely and, tragically, was too weak to survive.
She remained in the upside down position 24 hours a day for two and a half months. After 75 days – and what is believed to be the longest labour ever recorded – Mrs Krzysztonek gave birth to a healthy girl, Iga, and boy, Ignacy, at a neo-natal clinic in the Polish town of Wroclaw. Yesterday she said she had not been put off by the prospect of lying in such an awkward position for months.
'I was relieved that there was a chance to keep the pregnancy and to give the babies a chance to be born successfully,' she added. 'I am feeling so elated that words can't describe it. They are such good babies, they are really calm and sometimes they even have the gentlest little smile.
'I've been told the labour was a world record. I am amazed by what happened but all I want to do is express my gratitude to the staff of this hospital for their wisdom and helpfulness. I would never have been able to get through this without them.'
Professor Mariusz Zimmer, head of the Wroclaw obstetrics and neo-natal clinic, explained that Mrs Krzysztonek's labour is considered to have begun when the first baby was born because that was when 'the birth had started'.
He said Mrs Krzysztonek was kept at the 30 degree angle to 'take pressure off her body'. Decided to deliver Iga and Ignacy by Caesarean on February 15. Each weighed just under 4lb.
'I was relieved that there was a chance to keep the pregnancy and to give the babies a chance to be born successfully,' she added. 'I am feeling so elated that words can't describe it. They are such good babies, they are really calm and sometimes they even have the gentlest little smile.
'I've been told the labour was a world record. I am amazed by what happened but all I want to do is express my gratitude to the staff of this hospital for their wisdom and helpfulness. I would never have been able to get through this without them.'
Professor Mariusz Zimmer, head of the Wroclaw obstetrics and neo-natal clinic, explained that Mrs Krzysztonek's labour is considered to have begun when the first baby was born because that was when 'the birth had started'.
He said Mrs Krzysztonek was kept at the 30 degree angle to 'take pressure off her body'. Decided to deliver Iga and Ignacy by Caesarean on February 15. Each weighed just under 4lb.
After leaving her hospital bed, Mrs Krzysztonek had trouble with her balance, but now visits and holds her two babies every day. They remain in incubators but are expected to leave hospital soon.
xoxo
Simply Cheska
xoxo
Simply Cheska
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