Type your answer here... RHOGAM AT 28 WKS, AND WHEN THE BABY IS BORN ALSO, IF THE BABY IS RH POSITIVE.
Rejection of what? A transplanted organ? Sometimes the body recognises the new organ as a foreign body and attacks it. Medication is given to prevent it usually.
The most common and dangerous complications of heart transplant surgery are organ rejection and infection. Immunosuppressive drugs are given to prevent rejection of the heart.
Recipients are given immuno-suppressant drugs to prevent transplant rejection and attenuate the immune response
I would, if I'm the mother. But I think, in general, more mothers would have just given the child a proper place to be buried into. Are you in that situation right now?
Fetus is name given to human embryo after it is recognizable as human embryo .
It is not an organ which contains the immunosuppressive drugs used to prevent rejection - the drugs are manufactured in a laboratory, in the same manner that something as simple as Paracetamol would be manufactured. These drugs can then be given to the transplant recipient orally (including via a nasal-gastric tube) or via an IV drip.
Referendum!
Cyclosporine is an immunosuppressant than is given to prevent rejection after organ transplantiation It is also used for rhuematoid Arthritis and certain types of psoriasis.
Tests such as amniocentesis and ultrasonography can determine whether a fetus is developing normally in the womb.
Because it failed to test the drug for its affects on developing embryos, even though it was targeted to be given to pregnant mothers to prevent morning sickness.
yes
Colostrum from the mothers teats.