List of multiple births

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For notable twins, see List of twins and Category:Fictional twins.

This is a list of multiple births, consisting of notable multiple births and pregnancies that were greater than twins, such as triplets, quadruplets, quintuplets, sextuplets, septuplets, and higher orders.

Contents

Cases by number

Triplets (3)

Quadruplets (4)

Quintuplets (5)

  • The identical Dionne quintuplets (born May 28, 1934 near Corbeil, Ontario) were the first quintuplets known to survive infancy. They were also the only set of identical quints known to live into adulthood.[1]
  • The Fischer quintuplets (born September 14, 1963 in Aberdeen, South Dakota) were the first known surviving set of American quintuplets. They consisted of one boy and four girls.[1][1]
  • The Lawson quintuplets (born July 27, 1965 in New Zealand) were the first set of surviving quintuplets conceived through the use of fertility medication.[1]
  • The Kienast quintuplets of Liberty Corners, New Jersey (born February 24, 1970) were the first surviving set of American quintuplets conceived through fertility medication.[1][1]
  • A set of quintuplets consisting of three boys and two girls was born Gdańsk, Poland in 1971.[1]
  • The Gaither quintuplets of Indianapolis, Indiana (born August 3, 1983) were the first surviving African-American quintuplets and were one of only three naturally-conceived U.S. sets in 1993.[1][1][1]
  • The Al-Ghamdi quintuplets (born February 2, 1988 in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia) were the first set to be born in Saudi Arabia. Saeed Al-Ghamdi and his wife, Salha, welcomed five boys.[1]
  • The Cassidy quintuplets were born in Dublin, Ireland on August 16, 2001 to Veronica and Kevin Cassidy of Wexford. The three boys and two girls are the first quintuplets to have been born in Ireland.[1][1][1]
  • The Brooks quintuplets were born to Kate and David Brooks on October 10, 2006 in Kansas City, Missouri. There are three girls (Ruth Elizabeth, Helen Marie and Emily Jayne) and two boys (David Owen and Jesse William) in the set.[1]
  • The Ziemliński quintuplets, three boys and two girls, were born in born in Poznań, Poland on November 2, 2006.[1]
  • The Ferrill quintuplets were born at Barnes Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri on December 21, 2006 to Jenny and Pete Ferrill of Danville, Illinois. The Ferrills, both of whom work in social services, suffered two miscarriages before utilizing fertility medication that resulted in quintuplets. The three boys (Landyn Konner, Layne Mykel and Drayden Karter) and two girls (Irelyn Kadyn and Kieran Skye), nicknamed the "Ferrill Five," were born at 31 weeks and are the subject of a documentary on TLC titled Quint-essential that is slated to air in late fall 2007.[1][1]
  • The Wright quintuplets were born on February 15, 2007 in Evansville, Indiana. The parents of the three boys and two girls, Rob and Emily Wright, live in Princeton.[1]
  • The Wilkinson quintuplets (born July 31, 2007 in Phoenix, Arizona) were born to Jayson and Rachelle Wilkinson of Cedar Park, Texas. They currently hold the record for the highest combined birthweight of a set of quintuplets at 21 lb (9.52 kg).[1]
  • Ramilyn Molino of Santo Tomas, Philippines gave birth to female identical quintuplets in Tagum City on October 10, 2007. 2 of them did not survive.[1]

Sextuplets (6)

Septuplets (7)

  • The first account of septuplets being born was to a 15th century couple, Thomas Bonham (d. 1473) and Edith Bonham (d. 1469) of Wiltshire, England. They were described as having "seven children at one birth" several years after becoming the parents of twins.[1]
  • The Frustaci septuplets (born May 21, 1985 in Orange, California) were the first septuplets to be born in the United States. Born at 28 weeks, only three of the seven survived, with one baby being stillborn and three dying within 19 days of birth.[1]
  • The McCaughey septuplets (born November 19, 1997 in Des Moines, Iowa) were the world's first surviving set of septuplets. The four boys and three girls were born at 31 weeks, weighing between 2 lb 5ozs and 3 lb 4ozs.[1][1][1]
  • The Humair septuplets (born January 14, 1998 in Abha, Saudi Arabia) were the world's second surviving set of septuplets, born at 32 weeks to a 40-year-old mother, Hasna Mohammed Humair and her husband Abdullah Mohammed Ali. They had been told to expect four babies.[1][1][1]
  • The Qahtani septuplets (born July 12, 2001 in Washington, D.C.) were delivered by Dr. Mutahar Fauzia and are the third set of septuplets to live past infancy. Their parents, Fahad Qahtani and his wife, are Saudi Arabian, and received congratulations from Prince Bandar bin Sultan.[1][1][1]
  • An unidentified woman gave birth to septuplets in a suburb of Algiers, Algeria on April 18, 2007. One of the babies, a boy, was stillborn; the remaining six are all girls and are reported to be in good health.[1][1]

Octuplets (8)

  • The first confirmed birth of octuplets occurred on March 10, 1967 in Mexico City, Mexico to Maria Teresa López de Sepulveda. All of the babies — four boys and four girls — had died within 13 hours of birth.[1][1][1]
  • The Chianese octuplets (born August 16, 1979 in Naples, Italy) were born to Pasqualina and Stefano Chianese. Six of the babies died and two survived. The couple had previously lost a set of sextuplets in 1976.[1][1][1][1][1]
  • A set of octuplets were born on December 20, 1985 to Sevil Capan of Imzir, Turkey. Born prematurely at 28 weeks, six of the octuplets died within 12 hours of birth, and the remaining two died within three days.[1][1]
  • A set of octuplets were born between September 30 and October 2, 1996 in a hospital in South London, United Kingdom to Mandy Allwood of Solihull. Allwood was only 19 weeks pregnant when she went into preterm labour and none of her octuplets survived.[1]
  • A set of octuplets were born on December 5, 1996 in Huelva, Spain to Rosario Clavijo. Two of them were stillborn and six survived.[1][1]
  • The Chukwu octuplets (born in December 1998 in Houston, Texas) were the first set of octuplets born in the United States. The smallest of the octuplets, Odera, died a week after birth.[1]
  • A set of octuplets were born between September 13 and September 16, 2000 in Milan, Italy to Mariella Mazzara and Giovanni Pierrera of Trapani. One died immediately after birth, two within a few days of birth, and the oldest, Margherita, died a month later on October 10.[1][1]
Image:Undecaplets.png
Dorothea, an alleged mother of nonuplets, shown supporting her second pregnancy (undecaplets) with a girdle.

Nonuplets (9)

  • A set of nonuplets were born on June 13, 1971 in Sydney, Australia to Geraldine Brodrick. None of the five boys and four girls lived. Two were stillborn and the last to survive died six days after birth.[1][1][1][1][1]
  • A set of nonuplets were born on March 26, 1999 in Malaysia to Zurina Mat Saad. She had five boys and four girls (Adam, Nuh, Idris, Soleh, Hud, Aishah, Khadijah, Fatimah and Umi Kalsom) but none of them survived more than six hours.[1]
  • In July 2002, a Sudanese woman was reported to be two months pregnant with nine fetuses after having undergone fertility treatment in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.[1][1]

Decaplets (10)

  • A set of decaplets were born in Brazil on April 22, 1946, including 8 girls and 2 boys. It was never recorded if they survived or died.[1]

Undecaplets (11)

  • Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494) reported the case of an Italian woman, Dorothea, who is said to have given birth to a set of undecaplets after having had nonuplets previously. This account has not been confirmed by contemporary historians and it is not known if any of the children survived.[1]
  • Zoe Efsthatiou of Paphos, Cyprus became pregnant with undecaplets after undergoing fertility treatment in 1996, but chose to have the number of fetuses selectively reduced to four in the hope of increasing the chance of a live birth.[1]

References

External links


Acknowledgement and Attribution Regarding Sources of Content

Some of the initial content on this page may be incorporated in part from copyleft sources in the public domain including wikis such as Wikipedia and AskDrWiki. Drug information for patients came from the The National Library of Medicine. Infectious disease information may have come from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Differential Diagnoses are drawn from clinicians as well as an amalgamation of 3 sources: 1.The Disease Database; 2. Kahan, Scott, Smith, Ellen G. In A Page: Signs and Symptoms. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2004:3; 3. Sailer, Christian, Wasner, Susanne. Differential Diagnosis Pocket. Hermosa Beach, CA: Borm Bruckmeir Publishing LLC, 2002:7 .

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