Then, at 18 weeks, 35-year-old Margarita was told her unborn baby had a deadly brain disorder, and that she had developed a high-risk pregnancy complication called placenta accreta.
While the diagnosis would normally result in a hysterectomy, thanks to the incredible efforts by doctors at UT Physicians and UTHealth, mothers like Margarita now have hope.
She was told her baby wouldn't survive and the placenta accreta, a condition where the placenta attaches too far in the uterine lining, could potentially cause severe bleeding that could kill her.
"My baby died in my arms. He was with me for about five hours," Margarita recalled.
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Once rare, placenta accreta cases have become more common in the United States.
The condition affects 1 in every 270 pregnancies. In the U.S., that's over 14,000 pregnancies a year.
"A common reason accreta happens is if a woman had a prior pregnancy delivered by C-section that creates a scar in the uterus, and the next pregnancy gets implanted into the scar," Dr. Ramesha Papanna, MD, MPH, maternal-fetal medicine specialist with UT Physicians and UTHealth said.
For doctors, the typical treatment is a hysterectomy.
"When I was in the doctor's office and they were confirming the condition, and when they told me about the hysterectomy, I fainted," Margarita recalled. "It was in a matter of hours to go from, you know, point A, and then you are going to point B, which is never to have babies again."
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Her team of doctors at the McGovern School for Medicine at UT Physicians and UTHealth chose conservative management, meaning they monitored and managed Margarita's placenta, but avoided a hysterectomy.
She was the first woman in Texas to get this option, resulting in what she calls her miracle.
"I ended up having another baby. His name is Frederico. He is our miracle rainbow baby," Margarita said.
Dr. Papanna says the method of conservative management is different for everyone. He hopes more women who are eligible are given this option.
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