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Newsgroups: sci.medPath: cantaloupe.srv.cs.cmu.edu!das-news.harvard.edu!noc.near.net!uunet!worldbank.org!gmillerFrom: gmiller@worldbank.org (Gene C. Miller)Subject: Immunotherapy for Recurrent MiscarriageMessage-ID: <gmiller-190493093909@gmiller.worldbank.org>Followup-To: sci.med, misc.kidsSender: news@worldbank.orgOrganization: worldbank.orgDate: Mon, 19 Apr 1993 13:34:38 GMTLines: 17 Following a series of miscarriages, my wife was given a transfusion ofmy white cells. (The theory as I understand it is that there is some kindof immune blocking that prevents the body from attacking the pregnancy asit normally would a "foreign" body. Where this blocking is deficient, thebody evicts the "intruder", resulting in a miscarriage. The white cellsapparently enhance the blocking capability.) Following the transfusion, shesuccessfully carried the next pregnancy to term, and Jake is now an active9 month-old who cannot wait to walk. We're now thinking about having another child, but no one (includingthe OBGYN who supervised the first transfusion) really seems to knowwhether or not the transfusion process needs to be repeated for successivepregnancies. Is there anyone in net-land who has experience with this?Thanks...Gene (and Jane and Jake)P.S. I've also posted this in misc.kids.
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