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Lab-grown vaginas successfully implanted in four U.S. women

"Truly I feel very fortunate because I have a normal life, completely normal," one of the four patients said.

By Brooks Hays
The scaffolding of the lab-grown vagina is built using muscle cells. (Wake Forest University)
The scaffolding of the lab-grown vagina is built using muscle cells. (Wake Forest University)

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C., April 11 (UPI) -- A small percentage of women are born with malformed vaginas -- the reproductive organ failing to properly take shape as the infant matures inside the womb. It's a condition known as vaginal aplasia.

It's a problem that can prevent a woman from enjoying a normal sex life. But it's a problem doctors can now solve.

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Doctors have successfully implanted lab-grown vaginas in four U.S. women born with aplasia. The women, for the first time, are beginning to enjoy a life with normal sexual functionality.

"Really for the first time we've created a whole organ that was never there to start with, it was a challenge," Dr. Anthony Atala, director of the Institute for Regenerative Medicine at Wake Forest, recently told BBC News.

To create the new vaginas, doctors first took a sample from the deformed vulva and grew a mass of cells. The outside of the vagina was built using replicated muscle cells. Finally doctors create a hole in the pelvis, and scaffold in the newly created reproductive structure.

The four women have all reported normal sexual function.

"Truly I feel very fortunate because I have a normal life, completely normal," one of the four implant-receivers said -- wishing to remain anonymous.

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And though none of the woman have gotten pregnant, giving birth to a child is a theoretical possibility.

"These authors have not only successfully treated several patients with a difficult clinical problem," added Professor Martin Birchall, who has conducted research on lab-grown windpipes, "but [they've also] addressed some of the most important questions facing translation of tissue engineering technologies."

[BBC News] [Wake Forest]

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