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[return to "Woman with Transplanted Uterus Gives Birth, the First in the U.S"]
1. koolba+d4[view] [source] 2017-12-02 21:44:04
>>iamthi+(OP)
From the article (not all contiguous but related):

> A new frontier, uterus transplants are seen as a source of hope for women who cannot give birth because they were born without a uterus or had to have it removed because of cancer, other illness or complications from childbirth. Researchers estimate that in the United States, 50,000 women might be candidates.

> The transplants are meant to be temporary, left in place just long enough for a woman to have one or two children, and then removed so she can stop taking the immune-suppressing drugs needed to prevent organ rejection.

> The transplants are now experimental, with much of the cost covered by research funds. But they are expensive, and if they become part of medical practice, will probably cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. It is not clear that insurers will pay, and Dr. Testa acknowledged that many women who want the surgery will not be able to afford it.

While the science is amazing, why go this route rather than having a surrogate mother? I've heard the price of a surrogate is $30-50K.

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2. Doreen+Bd[view] [source] 2017-12-02 23:18:15
>>koolba+d4
While the science is amazing, why go this route rather than having a surrogate mother? I've heard the price of a surrogate is $30-50K.

That sounds rhetorical, but I'll bite anyway.

Some women really long for the experience of childbirth. This may not be entirely psychological. Giving birth has significant impact on a woman's physiology. In addition to changing the shape of the hips and often other details like that, it leaves a woman a chimera for many years. Because her blood and the blood of the baby mix, she carries cells from the baby for many years afterwards.

I have a genetic disorder. I have two biological sons. I was not diagnosed until they were about 12 and 14 years old, so I didn't (consciously) know about my condition at the time that I was making reproductive choices (though I did know I was always "sickly").

My first pregnancy significantly impacted how I eat. I removed a number of things from my diet to cope with my difficult pregnancy and many were never added back into my diet. I have reason to believe this did my health a lot of good. For example, it cured the chronic, sever vaginal yeast infections I had for more than two years prior that pregnancy. I never again had chronic, severe yeast infections.

I have read up a bit on pregnancy-induced chimerism and talked a bit with people online about it and talked a fair amount with my sons. I have come to think that some women long for a baby because it can have a profound impact on a woman's body in ways we don't fully understand and perhaps sometimes that longing is rooted in some subconscious awareness that going through the process of carrying a child to term may alter their body in ways that are potentially for the best.

This would be really hard to prove. We have no means to see what the biological outcome would be for the same woman with and without the pregnancy experience. But I am in remarkably good health for someone with my genetic disorder and I credit my two pregnancies with some portion of that fact.

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3. anamea+qC[view] [source] 2017-12-03 07:01:36
>>Doreen+Bd
> Because her blood and the blood of the baby mix, she carries cells from the baby for many years afterwards.

This is not true. If the baby had AB blood and the mother had A, then the baby's blood cells would be attacked by the mother's.

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4. yorwba+JC[view] [source] 2017-12-03 07:06:48
>>anamea+qC
It does happen. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemolytic_disease_of_the_newbo...
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5. anon57+FI[view] [source] 2017-12-03 09:24:14
>>yorwba+JC
I don't know about cells of the baby remaining in the body of the mother, but in the link you posted it says that HDN is caused (a) in the baby (b) by IgG antibodies (not cells).
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6. Doreen+bQ[view] [source] 2017-12-03 12:06:22
>>anon57+FI
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/15/science/a-pregnancy-souve...
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