Jessica Alves reveals her plans to undergo a womb transplant

EXCLUSIVE: ‘I’d feel complete if I could give birth’: Transgender Jessica Alves reveals plans to undergo a womb transplant as she puts on an eye-popping display in sizzling snaps

Jessica Alves has revealed her plans to undergo a womb transplant so she can fall pregnant, even though the procedure has never been undertaken on a transgender woman.

The TV personality, 37, who underwent sex reassignment surgery in February, revealed she is hoping to have the groundbreaking surgery as she becomes more and more desperate to have a child.

It came as Jessica also offered a glimpse of eye-popping figure in a series of exclusive snaps after joining the racy subscription site OnlyFans.

‘I’d feel complete if I could give birth’: Jessica Alves, 37, has revealed her plans to undergo a womb transplant so she can fall pregnant

Speaking to Closer magazine, Jessica said: ‘Even it cost a million pounds to have one, I’d find a way to do it. I would love a baby that has my own genes and blood, and I have my frozen sperm so I could use that for IVF.

‘All I wanted was to be a woman and having gender reassignement surgery was the happiest day of my life. But having a womb would be even better – I would feel complete if I could give birth.

‘I would love to have a brood of children. I would make me so happy to be called ”mummy”.’ 

Starting a family? The TV personality revealed she is hoping to have the groundbreaking surgery as she becomes more and more desperate to have a child

A large family: Jessica said she hopes to become the first transgender woman to have a womb transplant, and is currently speaking to doctors about having the procedure

Jessica said she hopes to become the first transgender woman to have a womb transplant, and is currently speaking to doctors about having the procedure.

HOW DOES A WOMB TRANSPLANT WORK? 

Womb transplants are still considered to be a groundbreaking procedure, predominantly performed with the use of a womb donated from a living woman.

However in 2019 history was made when a baby was born who had been carried to term in a womb transplanted from a dead donor.

The womb and blood vessels were removed from a 45-year-old woman – herself a mother – who had died of a stroke. 

They were then implanted into a new mother, who was born without a womb of her own, in an almost 11-hour operation, and the blood vessels connected to her own.

The women then began to menstruate 37 days after the operation and then had regular periods until she became pregnant seven months later.

An embryo was implanted using eggs which had been taken from her ovaries before the womb transplant procedure and fertilised using IVF. 

The baby grew healthily and was born after 35 weeks and three days by caesarean section. 

During the caesarean section the woman’s implanted womb was also removed and both mother and baby recovered normally.

Womb transplants, which cost £50,000 per operation, were developed to allow women to carry a baby if they were born without a womb or have had it removed through illness. Roughly 15,000 women in the UK could benefit.

It has been considered that the procedure could be trialled on those who were born biologically male using the organs of dead donors or women who have since transitioned to become men and had their wombs removed. 

In 2019 a clinic in Cleveland became the first to deliver a healthy baby that was carried to term in a womb transplanted from a dead donor.  

Prior to this, more than a dozen women had given birth after womb transplants, mainly from living donors.

In 2019 it was reported that experts were investigating whether a womb could be transplanted into a transgender woman who was born male.

Writing in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, the scientists said it would be perfectly possible to put a womb into a male body so that they could carry a baby to full-term. And they say it may be ‘legally and ethically impermissible’ not to consider performing the procedure. 

Several transgender men – those who were born women and then switched – have already given birth in the UK.

But in those circumstances it was merely a case of retaining the female reproductive organs after they transitioned, rather than having to implant female organs into a male body.

Six months after the surgery and the womb has healed, a donated egg would be fertilised with the transgender woman’s own sperm and the embryo implanted. The baby would then be delivered by caesarean section. 

Jessica also sent temperatures soaring as she posed for a jaw-dropping photo shoot after officially launching her OnlyFans account.

The star left little to the imagination by posing topless in several futuristic images, with makeup by Petr Simon Fridrich.

It comes after Jessica told MailOnline that she’s ‘desperate’ to lose her virginity and become a mother by whatever means necessary following her sex change surgery. 

Incredible: Jessica also sent temperatures soaring as she posed for a jaw-dropping photo shoot after officially launching her OnlyFans account

She said: ‘I am desperate to lose my virginity after my sex change surgery and I have been on the hunt for the right guy, but no luck.

‘I’ve been using Tinder in order to chat to those who are supposed to be a match but I haven’t been very lucky.

‘My account often gets banned because users report me thinking that it isn’t a real profile.

‘Last week, I agreed to go on a date with this man who looked and sounded amazing and when I turned up it was a catfish,’ she fumed. 

Eye-catching: The star left little to the imagination by posing topless in several futuristic images, with makeup by Petr Simon Fridrich

She wants to be a mum! It comes after Jessica told MailOnline that she’s ‘desperate’ to lose her virginity and become a mother by whatever means necessary following her sex change

Jessica has since joined X-rated subscription site OnlyFans, telling MailOnline that she has been using the site to date her fans. 

She explained:  ‘All my girl friends use OnlyFans and they talked me into it, before I was reluctant at making an account but now, after a week on it, I’m loving it. 

‘It is a controlled website on my terms and I am getting to interact with some very nice genuine fans and I hope to find my Prince Charming soon.’

No luck: She previously said: ‘I’ve been using Tinder in order to chat to those who are supposed to be a match but I haven’t been very lucky’ 

Source: Read Full Article