Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

TRANSPLANT

- BY EMILY RETTER Senior Feature Writer

As a young child growing up Lolita Carlerup loved babies. She would stuff a ball down her jumper as a pretend bump and spend hours playing happy families, unaware of the cruel fact that she had been born without a womb.

At the age of 14 she learned the devastatin­g news that, while she had been gifted with all the maternal instincts, she did not have the means to carry a child.

Lolita, 37, says: “I so wanted a baby I felt like I was dying with grief.”

But her sister Linda Wästerlund was determined to help, and when they learned that Sweden, where they live, was at the forefront of research into womb transplant­s, she agreed to give Lolita her uterus.

Linda, 42, says: “This was the most perfect gift I could have given.”

The world’s first womb transplant was carried out in Sweden in 2013, and Lolita had the operation in March that year.

It allowed her to carry a longed-for baby of her own – and that child, Cashdougla­s, will be three on June 27.

Today, he is playing Superman, bossily telling his auntie Linda to let him rescue her. He is the world’s fourth womb transplant baby, and his mum was the first to receive a uterus from a sister.

Lolita says: “It’s as if I borrowed a T-shirt from her. I know it sounds crazy. I just hope this will become normal for lots of families in lots of countries now.

“It has completely transforme­d my life. A uterus is an organ you can live without, it is not a heart, but I didn’t feel like a woman. This is a hard journey, there was a lot of pain, tears and worries. But it has been life-saving for me.”

Linda, who has four children, says she did not hesitate to give her sister the chance of motherhood, especially as her youngest daughter, Angelina, now 10, was also born without a womb.

Hopefully, she will never suffer the depression her aunt did, as Linda and Lolita’s younger sister, Lizette, 36, has already offered to donate her uterus.

Linda says: “I can honestly say I feel more like a woman without my uterus than I did with it. Because I have done something for my sister as a sister, and as a mother for my daughter. I have spoken to women online, some in Britain, who are considerin­g this. I urge them to go for it.”

Three British women will, in the next few months, become the first in this country to receive wombs transplant­ed from their mothers or sisters.

They could give birth as early as 2020. And by 2022, the procedure could become available on the NHS.

Eleven babies have been born worldwide from 42 transplant­s undertaken, mostly in Sweden, but also in the US and the Middle East.

Lolita, 37, was one of the first to receive a transplant.

The nurse, from Norrtälje, near Stockholm, was 14 when she discovered she had Mayer-rokitansky-küster-hauser syndrome, a rare condition which meant she had no womb among other symptoms. She sank into depression. She says: “I had always loved babies, played happy families.” Ironically, Linda had never been particular­ly maternal, yet got pregnant unplanned at 21. She struggled to tell Lolita, but finally did, in a card asking her to be godmother. Lolita says: “I was angry, it felt unfair.” She said nothing for two or three months. Linda says: “Finally, she said she had two choices – to turn her back, or welcome my son.” Lolita chose the latter path and was

 ??  ?? Cash-douglas on maternity ward Lolita and baby she longed for Linda, right, & Lolita as kids
Cash-douglas on maternity ward Lolita and baby she longed for Linda, right, & Lolita as kids
 ??  ?? Mats Brannstrom & Cash-douglas
Mats Brannstrom & Cash-douglas

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