Miracle Triplets Born 11 Years Apart

rockin'robin

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Ever wonder what you were like when you were growing up? Two 11-year-old sisters in England will have just that chance, thanks to the amazing birth of their newborn triplet who had been on ice since she was conceived more than a decade ago.

When Adrian and Lisa Shepherd decided to start a family in 1998, they underwent in vitro fertilization at the Midland Fertility Clinic because Lisa suffered from fertility issues that made traditional conception difficult.

Doctors obtained 24 eggs from the mother, 14 of which were successfully fertilized. Two of those embryos were then implanted in Lisa, who gave birth to twins Megan and Bethany in 1999.

The other 12 embryos were placed in cryogenic storage until the Walsall family started talking about having another child last year.

"We didn't know if it would work, and we agreed that we would just have one go with one embryo and if it didn't work, we wouldn't try again," Lisa, 37, told the Daily Mail. "It was one last chance, and if it was meant to be, then it would happen."

The Shepherds returned to the clinic, where doctors implanted a third embryo in Lisa that had been conceived on the same day as Megan and Bethany.

"It seemed strange to think that we were using embryos that we had stored all those years ago, that were conceived at the same time as the girls," Lisa said. "We knew that if we had another baby it would in effect be the girls' triplet as they were all conceived at the same time."

Ryleigh was born last month at 7 pounds 10 ounces -- 11 years after her sisters.

Experts told the paper it could be the longest age gap between siblings conceived during the same fertility treatment.

"When Ryleigh arrived, she looked like both the girls did when they were born 11 years before," Lisa said. "It was uncanny."
 
But they are fraternal, not identical, so they should be the same as any sibling set no matter when conceived. The new one should be different from any of the others.
 
But they are fraternal, not identical, so they should be the same as any sibling set no matter when conceived. The new one should be different from any of the others.

That is what I was thinking, too.
 
It would be interesting though if the new sibling looked a lot like one of the older siblings as she gets older.

Me and my brother are siblings but we look absolutely nothing alike. He's tall, thin, athletic, and blonde. I'm short, fat, somewhat athletic, and red-haired. The only traits we share are the fact that we are both white and both have blue eyes.
 
I think what they means by triplet is the concept of conception since the fertilized embryos were frozen, not the individual sperms and eggs.
 
But they are fraternal, not identical, so they should be the same as any sibling set no matter when conceived. The new one should be different from any of the others.

Exactly. And technically, they are not "triplets" because they did not gestate at the same time.
 
I could understand it if one embryo had split into 3 and then 2 out of that one (original embryo) was implanted and the last one frozen. That would make the girls triplets. Otherwise they are all created at the same time.
 
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