NO ONE WOULD HAVE EXPECTED THIS.
Diagnosis for three.
Diagnosis for three.
A child? For Maren and Stephan, that’s been clear for a long time. Only the name is up for discussion. Three have made it to the final selection. But while the names are already there, the child is making them wait. The longer it takes, the more draining it is for the couple. The doubts grow. Could it run in the family?
When the cause lies with the man.
Stephan’s brother’s diagnosis was clear: The desire to have children remains genetically unfulfilled. It took two years and several doctors to find out.
With Stephan, however, nothing was found; the sperm are fine. At the same time, Maren went through a small odyssey in finding the causes. Striking in her case were the exceptionally heavy menstrual bleeding. She tried everything: guides, self-help groups, psychologists, and all kinds of doctors. Then finally came the decisive diagnosis.
With the surgery to the child’s name.
Maren had never heard of a septum before. Until the hysteroscopy confirmed it: Maren’s uterus was divided into two halves.
Today, the uterine malformation with a fused vaginal wall has long been minimally invasively corrected. And the question of which of the three names it would be has long been answered at the sight of Maren and Stephan’s enchanting triplets.