The 32-year-old was diagnosed with uterus didelphys at
the age of 12.
Since starting trying for a baby with her husband
Courtney, 33, the couple have endured two miscarriages and had given up hope of
having a baby.
But as they began to consider IVF, Krista discovered
she was pregnant.
The horse trainer from Washington, in the US, said:
“After being diagnosed with uterine didelphys at 12 years old, I knew I had two
uteruses and two cervixes.
“But when I was 30, I found out that I also have two
vaginas that are side by side.
“I always felt the separate sections during
intercourse and smear tests but I just thought that feeling was a normal thing
every woman had.”
It was when she was just 13 years old, that doctors
warned Krista she may never have kids of her own.
She said sex can be “extremely sensitive and can
hurt”, knocking her self-confidence and affecting her sex life.
When she met her husband, Krista, then 20, told him
she was infertile.
As a result the couple don’t use protection.
For years despite the warnings from doctors, Krista
said she and her husband cried and prayed they would become parents.
“We both had so many breakdowns because we wanted one
so much,” she said.
“After probably 1,000 negative pregnancy tests it got
to the point where I gave up wishing anymore.
“Last December I put on weight so I bought my
billionth pregnancy test, which my husband and I thought was just now a waste
of money.
“I normally pray and hope while I wait, but this time
I lost all hope and didn’t bother.
“Then I saw it, it was positive. I hit the floor
crying.”
Krista is now five months pregnant and is expecting a
baby boy, growing in her left womb.
Most women with uterine didelphys have to give birth
via C-section.
But the 32-year-old said she still hopes to have a
natural birth.
“Because of my two vaginas the baby will have to come
down the left side vagina,” she explained.
“Doctors think I’ll have to have a C-section but I’m
dreaming of a natural water birth.
“It’s incredible because doctors still don’t
understand it.”
She said after a decade of hoping and trying for a
baby, she can’t believe her dream will come true.
And added: “I want women with uterine didelphys to
never let anyone tell them miracles can’t happen because they do.”
Dr. Nick Raine-Fenning, spokesman for the Royal College
of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists said: “The uterus forms in utero by the
fusion of two tubes, which are called the mullerian ducts.
“The wall between the tubes breaks down before birth
in its lower aspect leaving one womb and one cervix whilst the upper parts stay
separate and form the two fallopian tubes.
“The process can go wrong at any time leaving two
completely separate tubes and therefore two uteri and two cervixes, as well as
two vaginas, known as uterine didelphys or double uterus, at one extreme or one
uterus separated by a muscular wall which is a septate uterus.
“Uterine anomalies, as they are called, have been
associated with infertility, miscarriage, and preterm delivery.”



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