Stacia Alexander was 25 and pregnant when her OB-GYN first recommended a hysterectomy.
It was 1996, and an ultrasound had revealed fibroids growing in the walls of her uterus.
But she knew what the procedure had done to her mother: After her ovaries and uterus were removed in her 40s, her mother faded into a sad, irritable shadow of herself.
So after giving birth, Dr. Alexander opted for surgery to prune back the fibroids.
But by the time she was 45, the fibroids were back, and her doctor informed her that she was “too old” for another uterus-sparing surgery.
Persons:
Stacia Alexander, GYN, Alexander
Organizations:
OB