Dr. Quanita Crable, the Texas Health OBGYN who performed the procedure, says it could help other patients deal with uterine fibroids, which are the most common noncancerous tumors found in women of childbearing age.
- A robotic-assisted surgery being done in North Texas helped a Mesquite woman bring her"miracle" baby into the world.
"It's difficult for a fibroid and a baby to share the same space," Dr. Crable said."That can cause a lot of miscarriages, early pregnancy loss. That can cause difficulty getting pregnant in the first place." "To deliver a baby, to hear them cry, and to have to say goodbye to them four hours after is pretty difficult," Burnett said.
"I've seen a lot of women who are hopeless, crying in my office because they lost a baby or haven't been able to become pregnant," said Dr. Crable."Just the fact that I'm able to give them a little bit of hope, or a lot of hope, it's a feeling you can't even describe." "I was so nervous," she said."I was scared. I was terrified. I was terrified the whole pregnancy.
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