Video

VIDEO: Stem cells may reverse premature menopause, restore fertility


 

REPORTING FROM ENDO 2018

Two women in their 30s resumed menstruation about 7 months after one of their ovaries was injected with human mesenchymal stem cells obtained from their hips.

Neither of the women had menstruated for about 5 years; both were in premature menopause and wanted desperately to start a family. Estrogen levels began increasing soon after treatment, and night sweats and other symptoms of menopause almost disappeared. After a year, the treated ovary was almost the size of a normal premenopausal ovary. There weren’t any complications or side effects, and both women are now pursuing pregnancy.

The results are “very exciting, very encouraging,” said senior investigator Ayman Al-Hendy, MD, PhD, a gynecology professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Contraception coverage rollback is discriminatory
MDedge Family Medicine
Ulipristal acetate reduced bleeding for women with fibroids
MDedge Family Medicine
Young female hematologic cancer survivors have increased infertility risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Teach your adolescent patients about normal menses, so they know when it’s abnormal
MDedge Family Medicine
Newer hormonal contraception formulations linked to breast cancer risk*
MDedge Family Medicine
Self-administered subcutaneous Depo-Provera ‘feasible and acceptable’
MDedge Family Medicine
Iodine deficiency linked to delay in pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
Gender affirmation surgery has become more common
MDedge Family Medicine
High-normal TSH linked to unexplained infertility
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Fezolinetant drops testosterone levels in PCOS
MDedge Family Medicine