Older women are more likely to produce twins

Apr 25, 2007

WHEN women become old, their ovaries get into overdrive. That is why a relatively large number of older mothers get twins. Though fertility declines with age, older women who have children are more likely than younger mothers to give birth to non-identical twins.

GRAIN OF SCIENCE

WHEN women become old, their ovaries get into overdrive. That is why a relatively large number of older mothers get twins. Though fertility declines with age, older women who have children are more likely than younger mothers to give birth to non-identical twins.

“It is a paradox that nobody could explain,” says Roy Homburg of the Free University Medical Centre in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

Non-identical twins develop from separate fertilised eggs, so the increase among older women was attributed to their fertility treatment.

However, when Homburg and his colleagues analysed multiple birth records in the Netherlands over the past decade, they found that more than half the cases involved natural pregnancies.

The team used ultrasound to monitor the growth of ovarian follicles, from which the eggs are released, in 507 women. Of the 105 women who produced multiple eggs in one cycle, 95% were more than 30 years old.

The older women also had increased levels of the follicle stimulating hormone (FSH). Women who produced multiple eggs had the highest levels of all.

From the age of 35 to the menopause, FSH goes up steadily to counter failing ovaries, which have difficulty releasing eggs and in some cases, the body overcompensates, shooting hormone levels so high that two are released.

The New Scientist Magazine

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