Thinking of you Bella. I think it's best that they can tell that now and keep an eye on things. That means they can take action if need. I know you must be stressed.

But let me tell you a good news story about this exact thing. My little sisters (now 30, so not that little) are twins. My mum didn't even know she was having twins until the second one was born. The first one was actually born stillborn and very very very tiny (not much bigger than a biro - there is the most heartwrenching photo of her in my dad's hand, and her whole body fits in it), but they revived her - three times! Today, she is a perfectly normal and healthy adult with two little munchkins of her own.

Apparently something very similar had happened. She wasn't getting nutrition from the placenta, and hte only way they knew that was when mum delivered the placenta and they could see what was going on.

So what I'm saying is that you have all the advantages of modern medicine and testing now. And if that kind of miracle can happen 30 yrs ago without it, then I am sure you have a much better chance of them being able to manage the situation and make early enough decisions to do what needs to be done.

Thinking of you

xxx