same as rest of population
monozygotic or maternal twins
Yes, monozygotic twins can share a placenta if they implant close enough to each other in the uterus.
Yes they are twins. They are monozygotic twins (identical twins).
MonoZygotic Twins
The frequency of having monozygotic twins (identcal) is about 4 out of every 1000 births. Whereas dizygotic twins (fraternal) is about 12 out of every 1000.
Monozygotic
Monozygotic twins are also known as identical twins. They form from a single egg that splits into two forming two babies with the same genetic information.
No, monozygotic twins would be the same sex. Monozygotic twins come from one single fertilized egg, or zygote, which then splits to create two separate zygotes which will be genetically identical, or "identical twins", which will always be of the same gender.
Approximately 30 of twins are identical, also known as monozygotic twins.
Dizygotic twins develop from two separate ova fertilized by different sperm at roughly the same time, they are also called fraternal twins. Monozygotic twins develop from one zygote that splits apart producing genetically identical zygotes; also called identical twins.
The type of twins created following IVF are Dizygotic. These are twins resulting from the fertilisation of two separate eggs by two separate sperm. Monozygotic twins are the result of a single egg dividing after fertilisation. http://twinstips.com
Monozygotic twins, also known as identical twins, are formed from a single fertilized egg and share the same genetic makeup. Dizygotic twins, or fraternal twins, are formed from two separate eggs fertilized by two different sperm cells, resulting in different genetic makeup. Monozygotic twins are more similar in terms of genetic traits and development compared to dizygotic twins.