Miscarriage Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Miscarriage, including details on signs, symptoms, recurrent, pregnancy. | ||||||||
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Use of a gestational carrier for a patient with recurrent adverse pregnancy outcomes from early onset severe pre-eclampsia.Farley DM, Grainger DA, Tjaden BL, Frazier LM, Maki JE Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, Wichita, Kansas 67226, USA. OBJECTIVE: To describe the first reported case of gestational carrier treatment to prevent severe early onset pre-eclampsia. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: A university-based reproductive endocrinology and infertility clinic and a tertiary care hospital. PATIENT(S): A 29-year-old woman and her husband with three consecutive pregnancies complicated by early onset severe pre-eclampsia causing fetal demises at 22 and 24 weeks gestation; a neonatal death at 25 weeks gestation; and life-threatening maternal hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets. INTERVENTION(S): An IVF procedure in the patient using her husband's sperm with the transfer of two embryos to a friend who offered to be a gestational carrier. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Successful IVF cycle in the patient and uncomplicated pregnancy and delivery in the gestational carrier. RESULT(S): The gestational carrier achieved a pregnancy and progressed without complications to delivery of a healthy, 3.2-kg infant at 39 weeks gestation. CONCLUSION(S): The use of a gestational carrier deserves consideration as a treatment option in patients with poor reproductive histories because of early onset severe pre-eclampsia and hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets syndrome. This experience also suggests that development of pre-eclampsia may be in large part maternally rather than embryologically or paternally driven. Published 1 January 2007 in Fertil Steril, 87(1): 189.e1-3.
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