Uterine Transplants: A New Frontier in Science
        
            By Shari Rudavsky, 
                Indy Star
             | 12. 17. 2011
        
            Researchers, including some from IU, are studying procedure than could benefit thousands
                    
                                    
                    
                                                                                                                                    
                                                                            
                              
    
  
  
    
  
          
  
      
    
            In the early days of infertility research, scientists -- flush with the promise of transplant medicine -- wondered whether replacing the uterus would help women who were unable to conceive. But less invasive treatments proved feasible, and such research fell by the wayside.
Now, a handful of researchers, including some at the Indiana University School of Medicine, are exploring whether uterine transplants might be able to help women who lack a womb to bear children.
Thousands of women could benefit, but practical and ethical questions remain. When should elective transplants be used? Is a mother's desire to carry her own child reason enough? How might transplant rejection drugs affect a fetus?
The hunger for answers is strong enough that an Indiana University gynecologist convened a conference Dec. 5 at which two dozen people, including international experts in uterine and facial transplants, pondered the next steps.
"This is the first time that I think IU has looked at this seriously," said Dr. Giuseppe Del Priore, Mary Fendrich Hulman Professor of Gynecologic Surgery. "It's encouraging that so many people think it's a...
 
       
 
  
 
    
    
  
   
                        
                                                                                
                 
                                                    
                            
                                  
    
  
  
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