If you've ever wondered if it's possible to get pregnant while you're already pregnant, you're going to want to read on.
Fertility varies vastly from woman to woman.
Some can get pregnant incredibly easy, others struggle and are forced to pursue alternative options.
Some are keen to get pregnant, while others openly wish to avoid it.
But can women get pregnant while they're already pregnant?
If you're reading this and thinking 'WHAT?!' you're not alone.
It's a shocking question to ask and the answer may shock you even more.
It turns out women apparently can get pregnant when they're already pregnant.
The phenomenon is known as superfetation and is incredibly rare, but it does happen.
Here's everything you need to know about it.
Can you get pregnant while you're already pregnant?
The simple answer is yes.
But obviously there is more to it than that.
It's called superfetation and it occurs when a woman's egg is fertilised by a sperm, while another fertilized egg is already growing in the womb.
However biologically this isn't supposed to happen.
Connie Hedmark, an obstetrician from Michigan, told BabyCentre : "Pregnancy hormones usually shut down a woman's system, making it impossible for her to ovulate during her pregnancy.
"This is why superfetation is so remarkable."
Why does it happen?
No one knows why this happens, but some believe it occurs when implantation of the first embryo is delayed preventing a spike in hormones.
The lack of knowledge on the subject is probably because it's so rare.
Researchers into superfetation have so far only been able to find around 10 cases of it happening.
However, there may be many more case with twins that have been born, as experts believe the phenomenon is just not recognized widely enough.
What happens with the babies?
The two babies will be born at the same time, but depending on when the embryos started to grow will depend on the difference between the two.
They will be different sizes and have different ages.
Julia Grovenburg from Arkansas is one woman who has experienced this phenomenon first hand.
She and her husband Todd were desperate to have a baby and they conceived one.
However just two and a half weeks later, they conceived another - the odds of which are millions to one.
She gave birth to both at the same time.
In 2011, she told Mirror Online : “In our doctor’s 30 years of experience, he’d never seen anything like it. Which as a first-time mum didn’t exactly make me feel comfortable.
“Nobody could answer my questions and I didn’t even know what to ask. No one had witnessed this type of pregnancy before."
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