At the age of 46, the diabetic woman gives birth to Triple. All live without complications
A mother gave birth to a premature triple through IVF while passing through type 1 diabetic and chronic hypertension during her pregnancy. Triple survived the NICU for 225 days without any infection.

A 46 -year -old woman named Professor Jyotna of Delhi University gave birth to a premature triple during high -risk pregnancy. Triple, born in 25 weeks (about six months), survived the newborn intensive care unit (NICU) without an infection or any long -term complications. This was Jyotsna’s first pregnancy.
Three IVF-Kalpana newborns, whose joint birth weight was only 2.5 kg, was discharged from Amrita Hospital, Faridabad, with no permanent medical concern, a benchmark was installed for newborn results before the extreme time.
Jyotsna imagined after trying IVF (in vitro fertilization) over the years, as he had been struggling with infertility for years during his pregnancy and insulin-dependent diabetes (type 1 diabetes) and chronic hypertension (highly high blood pressure).
After conceiving through IVF, this pregnancy was the only opportunity to become a biological parents. In the last weeks, he developed pneumonia and other infections, requiring emergency cesarean delivery after ICU entry.
Despite important circumstances, the clinical result was extraordinary. Senior Neonateologist at Amrita Hospital. A team led by Hemant Sharma provided a continuous, protocol-driven care, which was both advanced and kind.
“These were the three very young children, whom we had called Tridvi, who had been born anytime before, but the difference was stable, careful care, non-invasive support, timely feeding and close observation with mother’s milk,” Dr. Sharma said.

None of the triple requires mechanical ventilation, a rareness for infants born in 25 weeks. Only one got the same dose of surfactant and someone needed blood transfusion to help breathable.
All three were started on entry within nine hours of birth and infection in full mother’s milk feed up to day four faster than the global average. On his 225-day NICU migration, he did not experience any hospital-surreal infection or intraventiricular bleeding.
Despite his illness, Jyotsna remained closely involved in Triple’s care journey. From his ICU bed, he continued to express breast milk, which played an important role in infants’ immunity and nutrition.
Infants were also given donor milk, which was used as a life -saving supplement, when the mother’s breast milk was not available, highlights the need for a strong human milk bank system in India.
“Even when I was unwell, the team helped me stay connected with their daughters, supported me to express milk, and behaved us like a family,” Jyotna said.

India sees births before more than 3.5 million every year, with around 300,000 under-five deaths annually. As the country’s purpose is to reduce the newborn mortality under India’s newborn action plan and the Sustainable Development Target 3.2, the matter provides a beacon of hope.
It underlines the importance of advanced newborn care, trained nursing staff, donor milk, and even the weakest newborns to ensure existence without disability for the weakest newborns.
The special case represents hope in a country where more than 3.5 million children are born prematurely ahead of time, and 3,00,000 children die before the age of five.
Doctors revealed that evidence-based, protocol-carved newborn care, especially in high-risk IVF pregnancies, can help in better survival results for infants, highlight the need for advanced newborn nursing, reach human milk banking, and a multi-faceted approach so that more children remain alive, rather live too.