Yes. You can carry twins to term. But your physician will have periodic blood tests to see the kidney functions.
In the medical field, you may hear the term of having one full kidney. The term one full kidney means that a person has one normally functioning kidney instead of the average two.
Yes, my grandmother was born with just one kidney and had multiple kids.
The short answer is yes you can but the older you are the more risk there is that the foetus may have genetic defects. There is nothing stopping you from carrying a child to full term unless you have obvious health risks such as kidney disease etc, but as long as you and the foetus are both healthy it should be fine.
A cow will carry a calf to full term which is 285 days or around 9 months.
No you can't.
Theoritically the answer is YES, sure a woman with one kidney not only can be pregnat, but capable of carrying the whole pregnancy and deliver a healthy child, BUT, the woman should be at check and control by Obstetrician and Gynaecologist and Nephrologist (specialist in kidney). Must check threshold after pregnancy, creatinine, urea, glomerular and tubular fuction, as well as heart function (incld. blood pressure)
Yes a woman with endometriosis can carry a baby to full term. Medically endometriosis can hinder the getting pregnant process. Consult your obstetrician about you level of endometriosis.
Yes, you can. I have carried 2 babies full term with a backwards womb. The only problem you may have is that labour can be quite quick.
Above the kidney is suprarenal, or sometimes adrenal.
Can you define the term "quadradic"? The twins were born full-term, strong and healthy. What did Clinton do differently in his second term as president?
A normal full term pregnancy is approximately 9 months for a human.
Many reasons. Talk to your doctor about this.