Is it possible to have a fallopian tube transplant




















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Notify me of new posts by email. Currently you have JavaScript disabled. In order to post comments, please make sure JavaScript and Cookies are enabled, and reload the page. Click here for instructions on how to enable JavaScript in your browser. Skip to content by Mahaa Ahmed figures by Jovana Andrejevic Each of the organs in our body has an important role to play.

Current treatment for UFI While recent advances in medicine have allowed uterine transplants to begin to emerge as a viable option for treating those with UFI, as of late , only approximately uterine transplants have been done around the world. Figure 1. After an in-depth screening process, a series of medical evaluations, and identification of an organ donor, an individual can begin to prepare for a uterine transplant.

Transplant surgery typically takes hours. After successful transplantation, an embryo retrieved via in vitro fertilization is implanted into the uterus with hopes of pregnancy. After pregnancy is achieved, the baby is delivered via C-section. After childbirths, the patient undergoes a hysterectomy. The entire process can take upwards of 3 years. Small hops towards tissue-engineered uteruses Although uterine transplants have resulted in at least sixteen live births around the world—six at Baylor University Medical Center , two at the Cleveland Clinic , and one at the University of Pennsylvania , tissue-engineered uteruses are another compelling option for individuals with UFI.

Figure 2. The top panel illustrates how rabbits of Experimental Groups had one of their uterine horns fully excised and had the other horn partially excised, to create an area where the engineered scaffolds could be implanted. Anatomic replacement of the damaged oviduct by transplanting a healthy donor fallopian tube requires the restoration of vascular continuity. Historically, genital transplants in other species have been moderately successful; such methods in the human clinical situation carry significant ethical and genetic problems.

This document outlines the history of solitary tubal transplantation and then details vascular strategy with several figures as well as narrative. Because both women are genetically identical, eggs from the donor ovary are equivalent to those produced by the patient herself. Transplanting the ovary into the patient involved microsurgery to reconnect blood vessels as small as half a millimeter in diameter.

Three months after the surgery, the patient had her first period in 22 years, indicating that she was ovulating normally again. He will present his results tomorrow at the American Society of Reproductive Medicine's annual meeting in San Francisco.

Competing interests: I have read and understood BMJ policy on declaration of interests and declare the following interests: None. Yanett Anaya is an assistant professor of obstetrics, gynaecology, and reproductive sciences at the University of California, San Francisco, and a reproductive endocrinologist at the Center for Reproductive Health. We welcome submissions for consideration. Your article should be clear, compelling, and appeal to our international readership of doctors and other health professionals.

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