Starting from the the we were married we knew we wanted to have children. For the last two and a half years, having children has been our top priority. In 2010 we used the fertility drug clomid for six months with no success. In January 2011 we decided the time was right and began the I.V.F. Process. For eighteen days Lauren was taking stem medicine (five shots a day) to produce as many eggs as possible. On February 13th, We had sixteen eggs successfully retrieved. Thanks to Dr. Vu and the wonderful staff at Kaiser Permanente's Point West facility, we had six "grade A" embryo's ready for implantation after five days. Due to a last minute push by Steven, we decided to implant two embryo's on February 19 th, saving the other four embryo's for more babies at a later date.
On March 5, 2011 Lauren and I found the news we had been hoping for, PREGNANT with TWINS!!!
Now as a side note, sometimes during I.V.F. a side effect of having the eggs retrieved, is that your body wants to replace those eggs with fluid. Most of the time a person can eat lots of protein and through urination, get rid of that fluid build up. Lucky for Lauren, her body could not filter the fluid fast enough, and she went from looking three weeks pregnant to looking six months pregnant. Lauren had a tap, where they removed the fluid with a needle from the abdomen. The first tap successfully removed over 5 liters of fluid. Now I say first time because Lauren was so fortunate that her body really wanted that fluid there. The second tap, a week later resulted in an additional 3 liters being removed. Between the taps and Steven being under soo much stress (ha ha) I took off with Russ and Kyle (Lauren's father and brother) to March Madness in Arizona, so my love and support had to be over the phone.
When Lauren was approximately 12 weeks pregnant, she started the second round of bedrest, the first being after she was inseminated. After a week, Lauren was able to return to work. During week sixteen we had made an appointment to go to Sonotech to get an ultrasound revealing the gender of our babies. "TWIN BOYS" read the caption of our facebook pages as the excitement stirred in the family. The Wunderli's were estatic to have their first grandsons and the Klippel's were glad to see karma coming back to Steven.
Starting week nineteen, Lauren and i went to the doctor to get our week 19 ultrasound and have them tell us the gender of our boys, which we already knew thanks to sonotech at week sixteen. While finding the gender of our boys we were informed that Lauren had a shortened cervix. Normally the cervix should be around 4 centimeters, while Lauren's was right around 1 1/2 centimeters. Lauren had also been experiencing contractions from pre-term labor. This visit also brought us to bedrest round three. Lauren was on bedrest Friday through Monday.
Lauren at 19 weeks |
Twenty three weeks was the landmark of landmarks, we were told that would be the very soonest we needed to carry these babies to have a chance at keeping them. Friday July 22nd at 2pm we showed up to yet again prove the doctors wrong as we had successfully hit the landmark WEEK 24, that very day! While in the ultrasound room Dr. Moreno-Hunt began an ultrasound heard through our little world. To put it in the Dr's words "oh no" the amnionic sac had pushed through the cervix and partially through the cerclage stitch. With no time to wait we were rushed to the Labor and Delivery room 221, where Lauren was put into a trendelenberg position. Magnisium sulfate was given to Lauren to help keep the pregnancy going and prayers were said. Lauren had been dying of on and off back pain which undetected by the sonar was found to be "back labor". At this point the Doctors said the inevitable, "we are going to be having twins tonight." By 7pm Lauren was dilated to an eight. Around 7:30 pm we met with a group of doctors who strongly suggested that a natural birth would be the way to go, with the best outcome for the direction the babies were positioned and for future pregnancies. Lauren requested an epidural at this point and was given two as the first one had little to no effect on her lower body.
At approximately 9pm Lauren was rolled into the operating room and a football team of Doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists, NICU staff, and anastesialogists formed a tight huddle around my wife to formulate a game plan to remove the cerclage and safely deliver the twins. At 9:30 operation "save the babies" began. Success first started as the cerclage was removed, and Lauren had gathered about an inch of my forearm under her nails, as she dug in from the immense pain of a failed second epidural. One step down, three to go. "Let's get ready to push" said the doctor. And a sudden hush and humming of whispers started when the doctor yelled in a silent room "stop pushing and call a code C." this is where I turned white and was rushed out of the O.R. I couldn't bear to think to leave my wife as she was prepped for an emergency C-section. As I exited the room I heard the doctor tell Lauren that baby A's umbilical cord was prolapsed (coming out first) and the doctor was actually pushing His head back in to keep him from getting tangled or twisted in the cord. Everything went from smooth sailing to a sudden storm, people rushing in and out of the O.R. Alarms going off and curtains drawing closed. Lauren recalls having a knife test to see if she could feel the point of the blade as the incision began. Lauren stated she could feel the blade and the anesthesiologist gave her a general, knocking her out for the rest of the procedure. Lauren recalled a voice telling her it was over and that she had two baby boys in the NICU.
Side step for a minute, you know when you are in the hospital and that nice womans mono-tone voice comes over the loud speaker and says calmly "code C to O.R. 1" yeah well that is all I heard as I sat in the recovery room, the place I was supposed to be sitting with my wife and newborn children somewhere around, I don't know, week 36 maybe...
Back to the action.
At 9:47 pm July 22nd coming into this world at an astonishing 1 pound 10.7 ounces and an impressive 13 inches was the first of two, Mr. Carter Steven Klippel.
At 9:48 pm July 22nd coming into this world at heavy 1 pound 8.5 ounces and a "just shy of his brother" 12 1/4 inches was the second of two, Mr. Easton John Klippel.
AND SO OUR JOURNEY BEGINS...
Wow, what a stressful whirlwind! I'm so glad you're okay and that Easton's surgery went well yesterday! Thank you for doing this blog and keeping us updated. Praying every day for your family.
ReplyDeleteWOW! What an amazing story! We wish you all the best and pray that everything goes ok. My wife is 27 weeks and I can't even imagine! You are in our prayer!
ReplyDelete-Stephen
Beautifully written Steven! You guys are truly amazing and so strong! What handsome little boys! Many are praying for you all here in PL.
ReplyDeleteI am a stranger to you but my girls were born at 30 weeks. I have been praying for your family since hearing on the Allyboo and Izzybee fb page. My girls are almost 2.5 and everyday I am reminded of the miracles they are. We also had issues with Emmy and the PDA. It sound like you have a wonderful support network. Welcome to twin parenthood where everythnig is double the fun and love!
ReplyDeleteWhat a miracle these two boys are! i am so happy for you Lauren! i can't wait to meet them! You guys are so strong- many prayers and strength your way! Laura
ReplyDeleteI pray God continues to bless your family. Thank you for taking time to keep us updated.
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