BEIJING, July 17 -- Angela Magdaleno's husband wanted
many children -- she just didn't know they were going to have this many.
Magdaleno, who had triplets three years ago, gave
birth to quadruplets July 6 by Caesarean section in what doctors said was a rare
occurrence of multiple births. Though she used fertility drugs with the
triplets, she didn't with the quadruplets. The latest additions -- two girls and
two boys -- were doing well Wednesday, while their mother, resting at home,
said: "I'm happy because they're healthy and so am I."
Still, Magdaleno, 40, worried she might be
overwhelmed with the work and sometimes struggles with mixed emotions about the
future. She has two older daughters, too.
"I don't know if I'm sad or happy," she said. "I'm
happy but, I don't know. I don't know how to explain it."
Three years ago, Magdaleno gave birth to the triplets
after undergoing in vitro fertilization. She said her husband wanted many
children. After their birth, she thought she was done having babies.
Then she got pregnant with the quadruplets. Magdaleno
said she was shocked at the news.
"She wanted to run," said her husband, Afredo
Anzaldo, 45, who lays carpet for a living.
Her doctor, Kathryn Shaw, a high-risk pregnancy
specialist, said Magdaleno did well during the pregnancy and developed no
complications.
The babies were born at 32 weeks -- well beyond the
29-week average for quadruplets. At birth, the girls were 4 pounds 43
centimeters long; the boys about 3.5 pounds and 40 centimeters long.
Shaw said the odds of conceiving quadruplets without
fertility drugs are about one in 800,000. She's seen only one other case of
quadruplets being conceived without drugs -- 18 years ago.
Even more rare, the boys appear to be identical
twins, according to their doctor, Soha Idriss, who expects the babies will join
their mother at home in about eight weeks.
As of Wednesday, their parents were still deciding
what to name them.
When the quadruplets come home, Magdaleno will have
help from two older daughters.
All 11 family members will be living in a one-bedroom
apartment in east Los Angeles. She said the living room is large, but she isn't
sure what the family will do when the babies get bigger.
When the older girls are at school and her husband is
at work, a friend has offered to help with the newborns and the triplets. "It's
a lot of work," their mother said.
In the hospital, the babies sleep wrapped in blankets
and attached to monitors and wires in separate incubators. They have full heads
of straight dark hair and plump pink mouths.
Anzaldo took the couple's triplets to White Memorial
Medical Center to meet their new brothers and sisters and to let Magdaleno get
some rest at home.
They have accepted their new brothers and sisters,
Magdaleno said. But at first the triplets weren't sure if they wanted the extra
siblings, Anzaldo said.
"They wanted one baby and no more," he said.
(Source: Shenzhen Daily/Agencies)