Amber McCullough is looking to Wednesday with mixed emotions.
The Minnesota mother will deliver twin girls at the Colorado Fetal Care
Center at
Children's Hospital Colorado via cesarean section.
No matter what, one of her daughters will not survive.
"I'm anxious and excited for Hannah and dreading what it means for Olivia," McCullough, 31, said.
Hannah and Olivia are conjoined twins who will be delivered by C-section
at 32 weeks gestation, under the care of renowned fetal surgeon Dr.
Timothy M. Crombleholme.
"I will get to see my girls very briefly after the delivery," McCullough
said. "They will need to be intubated right away, but the doctors will
hold them up real quick and I'll get a peek."
McCullough doesn't expect to have the chance to hold her daughters
before doctors start the eight- to 12-hour surgery it will require to
separate them.
McCullough says her daughters are joined at the chest, stomach and hips.
Hannah and Olivia share an abdomen, liver and intestinal tract. The
girls have separate hearts and kidneys.
"If I had my way, I'd keep them together if they both could live,"
McCullough said. "But it's not possible. I wish it were. If they stay
together, they'll both pass."
During her pregnancy, McCullough was overwhelmed with the opinions of doctors, friends and family.
She knew she wanted to carry her daughters and give them a shot at life even though the odds were stacked against them.
"I just can't lose both," McCullough said. "There's a chance of saving one."
The latest statistics reveal conjoined twins occur once in every 200,000
births. Forty to 60% of conjoined twins are stillborn, while 35%
survive only one day.
Hannah and Olivia have fared well during the pregnancy. Doctors have
told McCullough that once the umbilical cord is cut after delivery, the
girls will be tested.
Olivia is not expected to survive because of her heart. She only has a single ventricle and is missing valves.
Hannah's future is uncertain. She will face challenges which, for now, remain a mystery.
"We'll just have some things to work out as we go forward," McCullough
said. "I'm going to make dang sure she's happy and comfortable."
Last winter, McCullough, of Hastings, Minn., learned she was expecting
one baby. Shortly into her second trimester she visited a doctor, only
to walk out with a stunning revelation.
"I went in thinking I needed some simple antibiotics at an urgent care in Burnsville, and I walked out of there with a diagnosis of conjoined twins. I was in shock," said McCullough.
McCullough said her pregnancy became more complicated as she visited
several hospitals for consultations and received conflicting opinions of
whether to move forward with the pregnancy.
"I walked out of there thinking I must terminate out of my best
interest, otherwise I'd likely be risking my life, and I have a
6-year-old to think of," said McCullough. "So far in this journey we
have gone from OK, we can save both, we can save none, we can save one,
and it's been a roller coaster."
“There are few things sacred in life, your children will always make the
top of that list, and of those few things sacred in life, they are
always worth fighting for, even if you lose the battle. I think it’s
very important their story be told. With my girls lies a message of
life, strength, beauty.”
McCullough chose the University of Minnesota Maternal-Fetal Medicine
Center to proceed with the high-risk pregnancy under the care of Dr.
Tracy Prosen, who is also the Fetal Diagnosis and Treatment Center
director.
"It's a balancing act. What are the risks to mom in this pregnancy and
what are the risks to baby or babies? This is a situation where Amber
has known all along this is a risk to her own health, and we've been
monitoring closely for that," said Prosen.
Prosen diagnosed the twims with what is known as a
Thoraco-omphalo-ischiopagus-tripus conjoinment, a term meaning the girls
are joined from mid-chest to pelvis, sharing an abdomen, liver and
intestinal tract, with three legs. The girls have two separate hearts
and kidneys.
Hannah is the healthier twin, while Olivia has a weaker heart and only
one leg, along with a congenital brain malformation called a Dandy
Walker variant. With such health complications, doctors advised
McCullough that Olivia is not expected to survive birth, while Hannah
has a chance at survival.
"The cards are stacked against us. The reality right now is there is
nothing they can do for Olivia. That is very hard to accept. People have
asked me if I am ready for that. Course I'm not. Nobody is. I don't
think you can prepare for losing a child," said McCullough, through
tears. "You never picture yourself having conversations about contacting
funeral homes, cremation, or memory baptisms. You don't think of having
to make those arrangements for your kid when you should be painting
their room pink or something."
"It's really the ultimate moral dilemma. It's been very difficult.
But at the end of the day, if it's absolutely necessary and I'd lose
both of them if we don't do this, then we need to do this," said
McCullough.
McCullough points to the commitment she learned in her Army career.
"I will never quit. I will never accept defeat. I will never leave a
fallen solider. Why don't my kids deserve that same kind of commitment?"
she said. "I think it's very important their story be told. With my
girls lies a message of life, strength, beauty."
McCullough has lived at the
Ronald McDonald House in Aurora since early August. Her stepmother is there, keeping her company and caring for her.
McCullough also has spent the month talking with a bereavement doula, who has helped her sort through her feelings.
"This is not something you can be ready for," McCullough said. "Nobody
is ready to lose a child no matter what the circumstances."
USA Today
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