Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Multiple Births

Episode Date: August 29, 2023

There is an excellent chance that you know someone who has a twin sibling. In fact, there are some of you listening who have a twin brother or sister. Multiple births are something that isn’t common... but also isn’t super rare, either. However, multiple births have actually become more common over time despite the fact that there are some types of multiple births that are exceedingly rare.  Learn more about multiple births, twins, triplets, and more, and how they happen, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Newspapers.com Newspapers.com is like a time machine. Dive into their extensive online archives to explore history as it happened. With over 800 million digitized newspaper pages spanning three centuries, Newspapers.com provides an unparalleled gateway to the past, with papers from the US, UK, Canada, Australia and beyond. Use the code “EverythingEverywhere” at checkout to get 20% off a publisher extra subscription at newspapers.com. Noom  Noom is not just another diet or fitness app. It’s a comprehensive lifestyle program designed to empower you to make lasting changes and achieve your health goals. With Noom, you’ll embark on a personalized journey that considers your unique needs, preferences, and challenges. Their innovative approach combines cutting-edge technology with the support of a dedicated team of experts, including registered dietitians, nutritionists, and behavior change specialists. Noom’s changing how the world thinks about weight loss. Go to noom.com to sign up for your trial today!   Rocket Money  Rocket Money is a personal finance app that finds and cancels your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps you lower your bills—all in one place. It will quickly and easily find your subscriptions for you –and for any you don’t want to pay for anymore, just hit “cancel,” and Rocket Money will cancel it for you. It’s that easy. Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses the easy way – by going to RocketMoney.com/daily Subscribe to the podcast!  https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 There is an excellent chance that you know someone who has a twin sibling. In fact, there are some of you listening to this right now who have a twin brother or sister. Multiple births are something that isn't common, but it also isn't super rare. However, multiple births have become more common over time, despite the fact that there are some types of multiple births that are exceedingly rare. Learn more about multiple births, twins, triplets, and more, and how they happen on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
Starting point is 00:00:44 ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night. And how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. Compared to most species, human births have always been an inherently dangerous thing. Historically, childbirth has been one of the highest causes of death for women. This has to do with the fact that humans have evolved to have large brains, which has resulted in large heads.
Starting point is 00:01:21 About one birth in a thousand has a child with a head too large to actually fit through the birth canal. Once a human child is born, they're totally helpless. If you've ever seen a video of a cattle or bison giving birth, the calf is often up and walking just an hour or two after being born. Human children usually won't start walking until a year after they're born. and once they start walking, it'll still be another year or two before they can reasonably function without the help of someone else. Technically speaking, humans are born before they're done
Starting point is 00:01:52 gestating. The reason they're born so early is that if gestation took any longer, their heads would be so large that birth would be impossible. On top of all of that, historically it was very common for children to die before they reached the age of five. Infant mortality was the big reason why early human life expectancies were so low. Assuming you could make it past infancy, then you had a good chance of living a long decent life. I bring all of this up to illustrate the point that birthing and raising humans is actually very difficult. It's more difficult than it is for any other species that we know of. Because it's so difficult, the default for humans is to only give birth to one child at a time. If you have more than one child, the risks of childbirth go up, the risk to the
Starting point is 00:02:38 children go up, and the difficulty breastfeeding and raising the children goes up as well. That being said, multiple births obviously do occur. With modern medicine, most multiple births today are no more dangerous than single births, both to the mother and the children. So as we get into the subject of multiple births, we should probably start with the most common form of multiple birth by a wide margin, twins. Twins are uncommon, but not particularly rare. As I mentioned in the introduction, most of us probably know or are related to someone with a twin. The percentage of births that result in twins varies around the world and has varied over time. The lowest rate of twin births can be found in South America and Southeast Asia, where six to nine twins are born for every 1,000 live births.
Starting point is 00:03:25 The highest rate of twins are found amongst the Yoruba people in West Africa, where 45 to 50 births out of 1,000 result in twins. The percentage of twins born over time has changed as well. In the United States, the number of births that resulted in twins was 9.4 per thousand in 1980. But by 2009, it had risen 76% to 16.7 sets of twins born per 1,000 births. Recent data from the Centers for Disease Control in the United States reported that the rate of twins is now 3.4% of births. This is actually a dramatic increase, a more than doubling of the number of
Starting point is 00:04:02 twin births in just 40 years. The increase is almost exclusively due to the use of fertility drugs. The reasons why these result in increase multiple births and the reason why the Yoruba people have so many twins, I will get to in a bit. You're probably also aware that there are different types of twins. The most common type of twins are fraternal or di-zygotic twins. Ferturnal twins result from two eggs, each of which is fertilized independently of the other. Each egg and each sperm is a unique mix of genes, which is why siblings can often look very different from each other. Because separate eggs are fertilized by separate sperm, you can have twins that don't look the same, or are even different sexes. Fraternal twins will develop in separate amniotic sex as a result
Starting point is 00:04:47 of separate fertilization. Statistically, women from families with high rates of fraternal twins are more likely to have fraternal twins themselves. Normally, eggs resulting in fraternal twins will be fertilized at almost the same time. However, there's a rare condition known as super fecundation, where eggs can be fertilized by sperm from different men. In Greek mythology, the twins, Castor, and Pallux actually had two different fathers. Caster was the son of Tendarius and Pollux was the son of Zeus. In such cases, the children are actually genetically half-siblings, despite also being twins. The other type of twins that you're probably familiar with are identical twins or monosygotic twins. Identical twins are produced in a totally different way. It results when a single
Starting point is 00:05:34 fertilized egg forms a zygote, which splits into two to form two separate embryos. The percentage of identical twins to fraternal twins will vary depending on where in the world you are. Fraternal twins are about twice as common in regions with low numbers of twins and as much as eight to ten times as common in rates with high numbers of twins. The rate of identical twins is approximately three sets of identical twins per 1,000 live births all over the world. Variants in the number of twins born across time and place is almost exclusively due to the increases in the number of fraternal twins, not identical twins. Because identical twins come from the same fertilized egg, they have the same genetics. That's why they look the same and are always
Starting point is 00:06:18 the same sex. But there is another type of twin, which is extremely rare. It's so rare that there have only been two recorded examples of it. Although there almost certainly have been more, it's just that people didn't know it at the time. They're known as sesquiziotic twins. Cesiodic twins have similarities to both fraternal and identical twins, but it requires multiple rare events to all take place. It occurs when a single egg is fertilized by two different sperm. Normally when this happens, the results in a set of three chromosomes and the fertilized egg will not survive. This, This is rare event number one. However, in some rare cases, the egg fertilized by two sperm can sort itself into three different
Starting point is 00:07:04 cells. If the two sperm cells carry different sex chromosomes, one with an X and one with a Y, then you can wind up with cells having an XY coming from mother and father, an XX cell with chromosomes coming from mother and father, and an XY cell with both chromosomes coming from the father. The later cell, with both sex chromosomes coming from the father, can't develop. But the other two cells can exist in the same ball of cells, and that is rare event number two. Finally, the ball of cells with both XX and XY cells would split creating two different embryos.
Starting point is 00:07:42 And that is rare event number three. The result is a set of twins, always one male and one female, similar to fraternal twins. However, they share the same amniotic sac like identical twins. Cesquaziotic twins are also known as half-identical twins. They share more genetic material than fraternal twins, but not as much as identical twins. There have only been two cases ever reported, one in the United States and one in Australia. However, if there were other cases, most people probably wouldn't have known it as it would have just appeared as a normal twin birth. Once you get beyond twins, then things start to become quite rare.
Starting point is 00:08:23 While most of us probably know someone who is a twin, most of us probably don't know someone personally who is a triplet. That's because triplets are much more rare. Triplets can be identical, fraternal, or a combination of both. Most commonly, they're the result of three separate fertilized eggs. However, it could happen when two eggs are fertilized and one of them identically splits. and in the rare case, one single egg can split into two, and then one of those two eggs can split again, resulting in identical triplets. Triplets generally only occur in about one in every
Starting point is 00:08:59 thousand births. Identical triplets occur in only about one in every million births. Identical triplets are so rare that if a set of them are ever born, it usually makes the local news. In 2015, there were only four sets of identical triplets born in the entire United States. Beyond triplets, multiple births start to become extremely rare. There are only 3,556 known sets of quadruplets in the entire world, of which only 70 are identical quadruplets. The process of making quadruplets is the same as with triplets, with some combination of multiple eggs or zygote splitting. This many children being able to survive birth at the same time is an almost totally modern phenomenon. In ancient times, either the children and or the mother wouldn't have survived.
Starting point is 00:09:49 The first recorded case of quadruplets that survived into adulthood were the Fis quadruplets born in 1783 in Connecticut. Once you get beyond quadruplets, the odds of it happening and the odds of all the children surviving are so low that anyone who has them will probably wind up with their own reality TV show. Quintuplets, five children, are believed to only occur naturally once in every 55 million births. The first surviving set of quintuplets in history were the Dion Quintuplets of Canada, who were born in 1934 and on whom which I've done a previous episode.
Starting point is 00:10:26 The world's first case of sextuplets, six children that were born alive, were the Thorns sex tuplets born in Birmingham, England in 1968. However, three of the children died within two weeks of birth. The Rosenkowat sex tuplets, born in 1974 in Cape Town, South Africa, were the first sex tuplets to ever survive into adulthood. The first surviving set of septuplets, seven children, were the McCoy septuplets born in Iowa in 1997. The first ever recorded birth of octuplets occurred in 1968 in Mexico City, but all eight children died within hours of birth. There have been, ironically, eight recorded instances of octoplets in history. In every case but one, at least one, if not all of the children, died soon after birth.
Starting point is 00:11:14 The only case of surviving octoplets were the Sulman octoplets born in 2009 in California. However, the most extreme case of multiple births have been non-uplets. There have only been three cases of non-uplets, nine children, born in human history. In two cases, all of the children died after birth. In the most recent case, which were born to a couple from Mali while they were in Morales, Rocco in 2021, all nine children have so far survived and appear to be healthy. So what's responsible for such extreme multiple births? The first and overwhelming reason for the rise in the number of twins over the last several
Starting point is 00:11:55 decades and other extreme multiple bursts is the use of fertility drugs. Fertility drugs result in the release of multiple eggs which can all be fertilized. Normally, it simply increases the odds that one of them might become fertilized and take cold. However, it also increases the probability that all of them might become fertilized. Hence, while still rare, you see more of the extreme multiple bursts over time and more twins. In the case of the Yoruba people of West Africa, it's widely thought that the reason for the high number of twins may have to do with their diet. In particular, a type of yam that's consumed in the region which contains a natural phytoestrogen that stimulates the release of multiple eggs.
Starting point is 00:12:36 Another reason why more children from multiple births are able to survive is due to the improved care of babies born prematurely. Almost all multiple births run the risk of premature birth, and in the case of extreme multiple births, it almost always happens. It is pretty much impossible to have a full gestation period for that many children. That is why almost all of the cases of surviving extreme multiple births have taken place in just the last few decades. Also, extreme multiple births almost always have to be delivered via cesarean section, which is a procedure that until relatively recently was only performed in extreme cases and often resulted in death. Today, it's a regularly done procedure at most hospitals.
Starting point is 00:13:22 And on top of all that, developments in infant formula have made it possible for infants from multiple births to survive, whereas in the past, they might have starved to death. Multiple births have always been a part of humanity. but recent developments in fertility treatments and medicine have made multiple births more common and have dramatically improved survival rates, which means that there are now more twins, triplets, quadruplets, and quintuplets than ever before. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Starting point is 00:13:58 Today's review comes from listener Abdullah over on podcast attic. They write, and done. Abdullah here to inaugurate the Pakistan chapter of the Completionist Club. I don't think I've ever been more engrossed by any form of media, maybe except for reading the Lord of the Rings the first time around. Great podcast from the unpredictability of topics to perfect delivery. Never change. However, I would love to see more topics from my native land,
Starting point is 00:14:21 which has been tangentially mentioned many times. We'll have a piping hot celebratory Briani. Well, thanks, Abdullah. First, let me congratulate you because, as far as I know, you are the first member of the Pakistan Completionist Club, the first of your 241 million countrymen to have completed the feat. Also, I do have some Pakistan-related episodes on the list, including more on the Indus Valley civilization,
Starting point is 00:14:46 one of the foundational civilizations in the world, and an episode on the Partitia of India and Pakistan, which was one of the most significant events in the post-war 20th century. Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostogram, you two can have it read on the show. Arnold Schwarzenegger, born to be bad. And Danny DeVito.
Starting point is 00:15:07 Way to go, Mom. Are twins. My name is Julius. I'm your twin brother. Obviously. The moment I sat down, I thought I was looking into a mirror.

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