Anonymous wrote:Does this information arise when a half sibling grows up and presents with the disease?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1/3 of people get cancer eventually. There is nothing you can do at this point. Every donor, and you yourself, have something imperfect in their genes. And if you had ruled out this donor you wouldn't have your wonderful baby. I hope your PPD/ppa treatment is successful.
Thank you. We feel the same way. We wouldn't change anything at all. It does feel like we can't use the remaining two embryos knowing this so that is something we will have to discuss and sit with
This conclusion does not follow at all, in my mind. Did you think you were getting flawless human germ cells with this sperm donor? Something will go wrong with absolutely everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1/3 of people get cancer eventually. There is nothing you can do at this point. Every donor, and you yourself, have something imperfect in their genes. And if you had ruled out this donor you wouldn't have your wonderful baby. I hope your PPD/ppa treatment is successful.
Thank you. We feel the same way. We wouldn't change anything at all. It does feel like we can't use the remaining two embryos knowing this so that is something we will have to discuss and sit with
Anonymous wrote:I have inherited and passed down a predisposition to auto-immune disorders, OP. My mother has MS, I have Sjogren's and Grave's and my daughter has lupus. My son doesn't have anything (knock on wood), probably because autoimmune diseases are more prevalent in females.
Your child cannot escape their genetic heritage, OP. It doesn't mean she will develop that cancer! But it means she has a higher risk of carrying that predisposition and that her children might also be at higher risk. If it wasn't that lymphoma, it would have been something else. And there are tons of things you don't know about that have been handed down to her, both good and bad. She may inherit a high IQ! Qualities of patience and empathy. Maybe she has a mutation that protects her from Alzheimer's! Maybe she's less prone than others at developing high blood pressure. Genetic predisposition goes BOTH WAYS.
Enjoy your precious baby, OP. Mine are young adults and teens now. It only seems like yesterday that they were born. And I suffered from PPD after the birth of my first child. This too shall pass.
Anonymous wrote:Hodgkins Lymphoma they believe is more linked to particular viral triggers more then genetics, so havung a genetic parent with it wouldn't really increase likelihood of developing it.
Anonymous wrote:1/3 of people get cancer eventually. There is nothing you can do at this point. Every donor, and you yourself, have something imperfect in their genes. And if you had ruled out this donor you wouldn't have your wonderful baby. I hope your PPD/ppa treatment is successful.