Uterus Transplantation
A uterus transplant is only successful when a baby is delivered - Dr. Mats Brännström
image by: Association Syndrome de Rokitansky
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Uterus Transplants: Challenges and Potential
The birth of a healthy child in Sweden in October, 2014 after a uterus transplant from a living donor marked the advent of a new technique to help women with absent or non-functional uteruses to bear genetic offspring. The Cleveland Clinic has now led American doctors into this space, performing the first US uterine transplant in February, 2016 as part of an Institutional Review Board (IRB)-approved series of ten transplants using cadaveric donors. Dallas and Boston medical centers have also been approved for this program, as will other programs as progress continues. An estimate of 50,000 American women are potential clients.
The path to womb transplants, however, will not be easy.…
Resources
Inside the controversial new surgery to transplant human wombs
Pioneering surgeons have made it possible to transplant a human uterus that can bear children, offering hope to millions of women who never thought they could give birth.
A Sad, Unexpected Failure Highlights How Many Questions Still Remain About Uterus Transplants
While uterus transplants aren't meant to be permanent, the goal is to leave them in place until the recipient delivers one or two babies. At that point the organ is supposed to be removed so that the woman can stop taking anti-rejection drugs, which can increase her risk of infection and cancer.
A Transplanted Uterus Offers Hope, But Procedure Stirs Debate
There are many, many risks, and they concern me greatly," says Dr. Wendy Chavkin, an emeritus professor of public health and obstetrics and gynecology at Columbia University. She notes that, unlike the transplant of a liver or heart, a uterine transplant is not a life-saving procedure. Others worry that the procedure perpetuates social stereotypes.
Everything You Need To Know About Uterus Transplants
Most women have probably cursed their pain-inflicting uteruses at least once in their menstrual histories. But an increasing number of women who don’t have them—either because they were born without or had them previously removed—are going to great lengths to obtain new ones.
First Baby Born To U.S. Uterus Transplant Patient Raises Ethics Questions
He was talking about the birth of a baby boy to a mother who underwent a uterus transplant last year. It's a first in the U.S., but in Sweden, eight babies have been born to mothers with uterus transplants. Not everyone is celebrating though.
How a Transgender Woman Could Get Pregnant
The uncharted territory of uterus transplants is sparking patients’ interest, but surgeons and endocrinologists remain wary
The High-Tech Future of the Uterus
Following the recent success of the world's first uterus transplant, scientists are pursuing the new frontier of the bioengineered womb.
Uterus transplantation and beyond
Uterus transplantation is today the only available treatment for absolute uterine factor infertility which is caused by either congenital/surgical uterine absence or that a present uterus is non-functioning. Structured animal-based research, from rodents to nonhuman primates, was the scientific basis for a successful introduction of uterus transplantation as a clinical procedure.
Uterus transplants are extremely risky. Doctors should keep doing them anyway.
To appreciate why this particular transplant is so controversial, one needs to understand just how complicated the process is.
Uterus Transplants Fail Again: Why Are They So Difficult?
The main challenge for uterus transplants is that the surgery is very new, so it will take time to perfect.
Uterus Transplants May Soon Help Some Infertile Women in the U.S. Become Pregnant
Uterine transplantation is a new frontier, one that pairs specialists from two fields known for innovation and for pushing limits, medically and ethically — reproductive medicine and transplant surgery. If the procedure works, many women could benefit...
Uterus Transplants: Challenges and Potential
As with other reproductive innovations, ethical, legal, and medical strands – in addition to safety and efficacy – interweave this new option.
6 Things You Should Know About Uterus Transplants
Experts disagree about whether or not the experimental procedure is ethical.
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