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PREGNANT? READ NOW, URGENT

Renee O Negative


Last Updated: 12/27/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 99
Sign: Cancer

City: Wilmington
State: North Carolina
Country: US
Signup Date: 4/5/2009

Who Gives Kudos:


May 17, 2009 - Sunday 

Current mood:  angry
Category: Life
Sorry to all my negative friends who don't want this message put out here. I have to do it because there is still a chance this could occur especially with some poor negative women who do not have good health care. We all have heard that some Rhogam is a generic or cheap version that doesn't work or wears off, so don't be angry with me for posting this.

THIS IS FROM UCLA RESEARCH, NOT SOME "THEORY" SOMEONE HAS PUT ON THE INTERNET. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE THE PROPER SHOTS AT THE PROPER TIME, THIS COULD STILL APPLY TO YOU AND YOUR BABY. THE ONSET OF THIS IS BETWEEN THE AGES OF 15-25 USUALLY.

THERE ARE FORMS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA THAT DO NOT INCLUDE HALLUCINATIONS. MAKE SURE EVERYTHING IS DONE PROPERLY, ESPECIALLY IF YOU ARE POOR AND GOING TO A CLINIC LIKE I DID. I JUST CAN'T TELL YOU HOW MUCH I WISH I KNEW THEN WHAT I KNEW NOW AND COULD GO BACK AND MAKE SURE EVERYTHING WAS DONE CORRECTLY. I DIDN'T KNOW ANY OF THIS AT THE TIME, WISH I HAD. THAT IS WHY I AM TELLING YOU.

"UCLA Scientists have discovered that infants possessing a cell protein called Rhesus (Rh) factor that their mothers lack are twice as likely to develop schizophrenia in young adulthood. Reported in the December issue of the peer-reviewed American Journal of Human Genetics, the study suggests that the gene that codes for Rh factor is to blame for the higher risk."
 
"Previous studies reported a link between mothers and infants who are Rh-incompatible and a higher rate of schizophrenia in the children later in life," said Dr. Christina Palmer, a research scientist at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute. "Our research is the first to take a genetic approach to examining this increased risk."
Rh factor is a protein that sits on the surface of each red blood cell. A person is Rh-positive when Rh factor is present and Rh-negative when Rh factor is not. The gene that codes for the Rh protein is called Rhesus D factor (RHD).
When a pregnant woman is Rh-negative and her fetus is Rh-positive, her immune system can attack the child's red blood cells. This deprives the brain of oxygen and can cause jaundice.
 
"In heavy doses, oxygen deprivation and jaundice can cause serious brain damage," said Palmer, an assistant professor-in-residence of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences. "Even more subtle consequences may set the stage for abnormal brain development and schizophrenia down the road."

In 1970 a prophylactic injection, (Rhogam),  became available for Rh-negative pregnant women whose Rh factors did not match their fetuses'. Now widely used, the drug prevents women's immune systems from destroying their babies' red blood cells.
Still, a large number of Rh-incompatible children living today were born before prophylaxis was available. ***(THIS COULD STILL APPLY IF THE SHOT IS NOT GIVEN PROPERLY, NOT GIVEN AT THE RIGHT TIMES, OR, SOME CLINICS BUY THE CHEAP STUFF THAT WEARS OFF OR DOESN'T WORK AT ALL !!!), The UCLA team decided to conduct the first gene-based study of whether Rh incompatibility increased these children's susceptibility to schizophrenia. Prior research on this topic had been limited to birth records.
 
"Many studies have shown that mothers of children who develop schizophrenia experience a higher rate of fetal distress and obstetric complications," Palmer said. "We hypothesized that stressors produced by Rh incompatibility in the prenatal environment -- such as oxygen deficiency to the brain -- could predispose a child for schizophrenia later in life."
 
To test their theory, the UCLA team collaborated with Dr. Leena Peltonen, UCLA professor of human genetics. She mapped out the genetic make-up of 181 Finnish families in which at least one family member had been diagnosed with schizophrenia. Except for three cases, all of the children in the sample were born before the introduction of prophylaxis (Rhogam) in 1970.

Dr. Janet Sinsheimer, UCLA associate professor of human genetics and biomathematics, created a new statistical test to determine if maternal-fetal Rh incompatibility increased the likelihood of schizophrenia. UCLA colleagues Palmer, Sonia Minassian and J. Arthur Woodward used the test to scrutinize the chromosomal location of RHD and analyzed the gene's data from the Finnish subjects' DNA.
Palmer and her colleagues discovered that when a mother is Rh-negative and her fetus is Rh-positive, the child is more than twice as likely to develop schizophrenia than infants born from different maternal-fetal Rh combinations.

"We found evidence that the Rh-positive children of Rh-negative mothers possess more than double the risk for developing schizophrenia later in life," Palmer said. "This suggests that the RHD gene is a risk factor for this mental disorder."

"The next important step will be to look at Rh incompatibility in people born after 1970 to test whether prophylaxis has reduced their risk of schizophrenia." A board-certified genetic counselor, Palmer emphasizes that the UCLA findings should not panic mothers who don't share Rh compatibility with their children. "A two-fold increase is no cause for alarm," she said. "Schizophrenia is a complex disorder that likely stems from a combination of several genetic and environmental factors. It is doubtful that Rh incompatibility alone causes the disorder."
She encouraged Rh-negative women to take advantage of Rh-incompatibility prophylaxis, (Rhogam), receive good prenatal care (not a free clinic, and if you do have to resort to that, make sure they're doing everything right), and review their family histories for schizophrenia.

Schizophrenia is a disabling brain disease that afflicts 1 percent of the worldwide population and more than 2 million Americans. Palmer estimates that Rh incompatibility accounts for about 4 percent of these cases. People with schizophrenia may suffer from hallucinations, delusions, disordered thinking and loss of emotional affect. Medication can treat certain symptoms, but less than one in five people completely recovers from the disorder.

JULIA- juliaslens.com

 
Thanks for getting the word out. It is important!!

 
Posted by JULIA- juliaslens.com on June 2, 2009 - Tuesday - 1:10 PM
[Reply to this
Me

 
It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with negative blood types, but possibly a conflict between the combination of negative mother and positive child. Also, one could view it in a spiritual context. (If you believe in these things) Perhaps it has more to do with previous lives or a conflict in current mind patterns... some even believe children with autism or schizophrenia, etc.,  are kids being born more highly evolved (or who haven't incarnated here yet), who simply don't yet know how to exist in this particular physical form. Sometimes being human and living in this world (and society in general) can be traumatizing. lol. ;)

 
Posted by Me on June 3, 2009 - Wednesday - 7:00 AM
[Reply to this
PREGNANT? READ NOW, URGENT
Renee O Negative

 
That is the problem: The mother has negative blood and the baby  had positive blood. That is what causes these problems.

 
Posted by PREGNANT? READ NOW, URGENT on June 3, 2009 - Wednesday - 9:27 AM
[Reply to this
Ellenor Whitty
Ellenor Whitty

 
Here is one reson why they used to make couples take blood tests before they got married. If the woman was Rh-Neg and the man Rh+Pos, then they were often not allowed to get married at all because THEY KNEW (doctors, I assume) that something would go wrong with the children.

 
Posted by Ellenor Whitty on August 24, 2009 - Monday - 12:53 PM
[Reply to this
Cancerian Lady # 22 6969

 
wow im o rh neg and my son was born o positive..i had a hard time bringing him in this world but ill tell you there is a reason only time will tell..

 
Posted by Cancerian Lady # 22 6969 on November 2, 2009 - Monday - 5:33 AM
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