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Labor & delivery nurses of Dating.mobi, how do the fathers react when the baby is obviously not theirs? (by Sparky)

 Sparky (0)  (29 / M-F / Massachusetts)
21-Apr-15 8:40 pm
Labor & delivery nurses of Dating.mobi, how do the fathers react when the baby is obviously not theirs?

Source.

 

 

 
 
 rulost2 (35)     (53 / M-F / Mississippi)
21-Apr-15 9:04 pm

WWWTTTFFF !!!!!!!!


It would be more funnier
hearing the mother trying to explain it lol

 

 



Last edited by rulost2; 21-Apr-15 9:10 pm.
 
 
 SillyGoose 
22-Apr-15 2:21 am
Is it possible for a woman to give berth to twins but only one child has her husband dna?

 

 

 
 
 iloveubabe123 
22-Apr-15 2:25 am
Is it possible for a woman to give berth to twins but only one child has her husband dna?
that's very impossible.... :-)

 

 

 
 
 SillyGoose 
22-Apr-15 2:27 am
@iloveubabe123: I kind of thought it could happen.

 

 

 
 
 iloveubabe123 
22-Apr-15 2:33 am
Didn't heard yet since I was been assigned in OB-GYNE DEPT for a long years :-)

 

 

 
 
 rulost2 (35)     (53 / M-F / Mississippi)
22-Apr-15 3:23 am
Mama's baby papa's maybe

 

 

 
 
 WalkSoftly 
22-Apr-15 3:36 am
Is it possible for a woman to give berth to twins but only one child has her husband dna?
"" Yes, this is possible through
something called heteropaternal
superfecundation (see below for
further explanation).
Of all twin births, 30% are
identical and 70% are non-
identical (fraternal) twins.
Identical twins result when a
zygote (one egg, or ovum,
fertilized by one sperm) splits at
an early stage to become twins.
Because the genetic material is
essentially the same, they
resemble each other closely.
Typically during ovulation only
one ovum is released to be
fertilized by one sperm. However,
sometimes a woman's ovaries
release two ova. Each must be
fertilized by a separate sperm
cell. If she has intercourse with
two different men, the two ova
can be fertilized by sperm from
different sexual partners. The
term for this event is
heteropaternal superfecundation
(HS): twins who have the same
mother, but two different fathers.
This has been proven in paternity
suits (in which there will be a
bias selecting for possible
infidelity) involving fraternal
twins, where genetic testing must
be done on each child. The
frequency of heteropaternal
superfecundation in this group
was found (in one study) to be
2.4%. As the study's authors
state, "Inferences about the
frequency of HS in other
populations should be drawn
with caution."""
Link.

 

 

 
 
 BigPapaRedneck (11)       (46 / M-F / Kansas)
22-Apr-15 6:01 am
@SillyGoose: There have actually been twins where one was white and one black. It can happen if the body produces more than one egg.

 

 

 
 
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