Uterine didelphys

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Uterine didelphys
ICD-10 Q51.1-Q51.2
ICD-9 752.2
DiseasesDB 33962

WikiDoc Resources for Uterine didelphys

Articles

Most recent articles on Uterine didelphys

Most cited articles on Uterine didelphys

Review articles on Uterine didelphys

Articles on Uterine didelphys in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Uterine didelphys

Images of Uterine didelphys

Photos of Uterine didelphys

Podcasts & MP3s on Uterine didelphys

Videos on Uterine didelphys

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Uterine didelphys

Bandolier on Uterine didelphys

TRIP on Uterine didelphys

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Uterine didelphys at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Uterine didelphys

Clinical Trials on Uterine didelphys at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Uterine didelphys

NICE Guidance on Uterine didelphys

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Uterine didelphys

CDC on Uterine didelphys

Books

Books on Uterine didelphys

News

Uterine didelphys in the news

Be alerted to news on Uterine didelphys

News trends on Uterine didelphys

Commentary

Blogs on Uterine didelphys

Definitions

Definitions of Uterine didelphys

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Uterine didelphys

Discussion groups on Uterine didelphys

Patient Handouts on Uterine didelphys

Directions to Hospitals Treating Uterine didelphys

Risk calculators and risk factors for Uterine didelphys

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Uterine didelphys

Causes & Risk Factors for Uterine didelphys

Diagnostic studies for Uterine didelphys

Treatment of Uterine didelphys

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Uterine didelphys

International

Uterine didelphys en Espanol

Uterine didelphys en Francais

Business

Uterine didelphys in the Marketplace

Patents on Uterine didelphys

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Uterine didelphys


Overview

Uterine didelphys is a rare type of deformity (1 in 1000 women) in the female reproductive organs in which some organs may be either split or duplicated. Typically, some of these "extra" organs are non-functional or semi-functional appendages, although on occasion they will be completely function in all normal respects, and often independently.

Notable cases

A UK woman with two wombs gave birth to triplets in 2006. Hannah Kersey, of Northam in Devon, gave birth to a pair of identical twins from an egg that implanted into one womb and then divided, and to an infant from a single egg that implanted into the other womb. This was the first known birth of its kind.[1]

See also

References

  1. "BBC NEWS". Retrieved 2007-06-27. Text " Triplets for woman with two wombs " ignored (help); Text " Health " ignored (help)

External links


Template:WikiDoc Sources