Although Jenny and Chris Marr were overjoyed to have their first child, they never imagined it would happen during a p.and.emic. They would be welcoming spontaneous quadruplets, which is the rarest of all rare occurrences, which is much less likely. During Jenny’s initial ultrasound in November, the doctor’s gaze caught her attention. She was then told by the doctor that there were three babies. They were sho.cked to learn that they are having not three, but four babies when they saw a maternal fetal me.dicine specialist for a follow-up consultation a week later.
The Marr couple did not have a history of multiple births in their families, so the news of having spontaneous identical quadruplets came as a shᴏck. “I made the joke that I am not coming back because there are going to be five babies next time,”
Chris said. “We were just shᴏcked.” Not just the first-time parents but even the doctor was in shock to realize that the quadruplets are identical because it is so rare. “It’s unbelievable. It’ll never happen again in my career. ” Murray, an – at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas. “What a miracle it was.”
“The rɪsk was that one of the babies can develop stronger and basically take away from the other babies,” Chris explained. The doctor said that surgery might be in order which made the couple anxious again. But their doctors reassured them that they would address issues if they arose.
“The babies shared incredibly well. There were no incidents on the sonogram even leading up to that where we were worried that one of them, or two or three of them, would be significantly smaller,” Murray said.
Marr said despite being considered an advanced pregnant woman since she turned 35, the baby was born at 28 weeks and 4 days – she has had no complications. “It’s a natural process of conception, so whether multiple or single, it’s a much healthier pregnancy,” she said.
But her C-Section delivery went well as her husband and mother watched the doctor pull the babies out one by one. “They were all born in three minutes. It’s incredible,”
Jenny said. “We called them our baby birds because they really looked like baby birds.” Three of the babies needed ᴏxygen and all four stayed in the neᴏnatal intᴇnsive care unit for about 10 weeks.
Harrison Foy, Henry William, Hudson Perry, and Hardy Smith Marr were born at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas on March 15. The hospital said there have been just 72 documented cases of spontaneous, identical quadruplets. Jenny’s labor started when she was 28.5 weeks pregnant – just as p.andemic struck – and she said she “anticipated the w.orst”. But her C-Section delivery went well, with Harrison was first out, weighing 2 pounds 6 ounces.
Hardy was next at 2 pounds 10 ounces, then Henry who was 2 pounds 6.7 ounces and Hudson was last at 1 pound 15 ounces. “They each have little bitty characteristics,”
Chris said. “When we sit down and look at them we can figure out who they are but if you just look at them from a distance, they all look the same. Thank G.od”.
After two months of their sons’ birth, the couple brought their babies home and they say the safety of the infants was their top priority. “Having babies during a global pandemic has been quite the experience. Everyone at Texas Health Presbyterian Dallas made us and our babies top priority for care and safety,” Jenny wrote.
“I only hope that one day I can hug each of them and say thank you.” “We never knew how in love you could really be until you have a love for your child or children all at once in our case,” Jenny wrote. She added, “We just hope that this little story and our boys bring as much joy to everybody as they bring to us.”