Gransnet forums

Health

Womb transplant update

(9 Posts)
Tegan Sat 08-Mar-14 18:11:18

My friend knew someone who was one of the longest surviving heart transplant patients. I think people were very brave when the operations were first being performed. In the programme I watched there was a girl with cystic fibrosis whose brother and sister both donated a lung to; but she died three weeks after surgery sad. I found that incredibly sad. Her sister said she didn't want her sister to see how much pain she was in after she'd had her lung removed.

JessM Sat 08-Mar-14 17:32:45

Here's what it says on an advice website for kidney diseases

"The amount of anti-rejection medicines is important. In the early period after a transplant, patients are on higher doses of these medicines. Once the medicines are reduced to maintenance levels, they do not seem to have negative effects on a developing baby. However, long-term side effects are still unknown."

I can see why the operation would be technically challenging - the uterus needs a fantastic blood supply (to keep a placenta and baby going), it also needs nerve supply if it is ever to contract for the purposes of giving birth.
I guess if it had been on offer in the mid 1950s, my father would have volunteered for an experimental heart transplant.

Tegan Fri 07-Mar-14 12:20:45

Did anyone watch the programme on BBC4 the other night about early organ transplants and how dangerous/unsuccessful they were at first [along with being downright unethical sometimes]?It was as if the medical profession, at the time, had been given carte blanche to experiment with desperate people, but then that happened even in the early days of antibiotic use. Fascinating stuff. They almost stopped doing them until cyklosporin [sp] was discovered. Even one of the men who pioneered IVF had death threats made to him at first. Had my family not been affected several times by the distress caused by fertility problems I'd be totally opposed to these transplants; as it is I still don't understand how a process such as pregnancy that even starts off with a problem of rejection in a normal healthy person can be feasable when vast amounts of anti rejection drugs have to be used. Then there's the image of the man who had a hand transplant that went horrible wrong; how would one feel to have someone elses womb inside them; something that, unlike other organs is so 'personal' [for want of a better word]. What happens, by the way if someone is pregnant when they've had a kidney transplant which is probably the most common sort of operation done these days?

Mishap Fri 07-Mar-14 11:43:29

I confidently predict that the next step will be transplanting wombs into male to female transsexuals and delivery by CS.

ffinnochio Fri 07-Mar-14 07:58:30

The advancement in medical science is a tricky one, isn't it. Just because a thing can be done doesn't necessarily mean it has to be done. Also wonder about the long term effects the drug regime will have upon a child who is carried to full term in this way. Anti-rejection drugs will surely have an impact.

Aka Thu 06-Mar-14 23:00:30

It's their choice.

JessM Thu 06-Mar-14 22:39:38

Yes it is bags sad that people are so desperate to become mothers that they re willing to take so many risks with their health - operations, powerful drugs and maybe another operation to remove the implanted womb if they don't want to take anti rejection drugs for the rest of their lives.

thatbags Thu 06-Mar-14 19:27:25

It certainly seems risky in lots of ways. The women receiving the transplants must be desperate and that's saddening too.

JessM Thu 06-Mar-14 17:33:22

This story causes me to make downturned mouth faces. The women will have to take powerful anti-rejection drugs before and during pregnancy. And for ever after unless the transplanted womb is removed. These drugs are not a walk in the park - they suppress aspects of the immune system so that they don't attack the transplanted organ.
Surely transplant technology should be kept for saving lives not for infertility treatment?

www.theguardian.com/society/2014/mar/03/women-pioneering-womb-transplants-impregnated-ivf