Posted on March 6, 2010.
Do you want the body to fight a sickle gene trait during pregnancy? I had a miscarriage and was told that my boyfriend has sickle cell trait, I'm not too sure if I have no respect or carrier, but what are the chances if I reject the sperm because of this . What happens if you become pregnant again
The error is probably nothing to do with her having the character. The effects of sickle cell disease do not show up until a baby a few months.
However, a pregnant woman with sickle cell disease is a high risk pregnancy and needs close monitoring.
And please get tested, so that you and he can make decisions about whether you want the risk of having a child with sickle cell disease, or even if you want to have a genetic defect to half of your children.
Human bodies are not "fight" sickle cells. Our body will fight the foreign blood, but not the trait / sickle cell itself.
The disease is a genetic disease where the protein hemoglobin (the protein that carries oxygen) is poorly coded which means that the red blood cells take an elongated shape (hence, sickle cell anemia). Most people have double lines for normal hemoglobin (a mother and the other as a father). Sickle cell disease occurs in people who have two copies of the gene for hemoglobin miscoded. Sickle cell trait (a poorly coded and normal) that half of regular blood cells and half of sickle cell.
In other words, you had a miscarriage for another reason. Sickle cell lines have no effect on whether or not you will carry her pregnancy to term or not.
Moreover, the sperm do not contain blood / red blood cells, so it should not even come into play Try again, and I wish you better luck next time.