xy gonadal dysgenesis is also known as Swyer syndrome:
in reading the above article, it appears that for the most part babies with Swyer syndrome are raised as girls ... they are given hormone replacement therapy at an early age ... female hormones.
Not sure what would happen if the baby was raised as a boy and given male hormones ??? Do the medical professionals just assume female because the baby "looks" like a girl at birth ... yet has XY chromosomes at the 23rd pairing???
Seems to me that XY = male ... however, I cannot answer for the health professionals who make the decision at the time of birth.
Matthew 19:4 And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female
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Swyer syndrome is a condition that affects sex development. Sex development usually follows a particular path based on an individual's chromosomes; however, in Swyer syndrome, sex development is not typical for the affected individual's chromosomal pattern.
Chromosomes contain the genetic instructions for how the body develops and functions. People usually have 46 chromosomes in each cell. Two of the 46 chromosomes, known as X and Y, are called sex chromosomes because they help determine whether a person will develop male or female reproductive structures. Girls and women typically have two X chromosomes (46,XX karyotype), while boys and men typically have one X chromosome and one Y chromosome (46,XY karyotype). In Swyer syndrome, individuals have one X chromosome and one Y chromosome in each cell, which is the pattern typically found in boys and men; however, they have female reproductive structures.
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Because they appear female on the outside, babies with Swyer syndrome are usually raised as girls and develop a female gender identity, which is a person's sense of their gender (girl, boy, a combination, or neither). Swyer syndrome may be identified before birth, at birth, or later when a child does not go through puberty as usual. Because they do not have functional ovaries that produce hormones, affected individuals often begin hormone replacement therapy during early adolescence to start puberty, causing the breasts and uterus to grow, and eventually leading to menstruation. Hormone replacement therapy is also important for bone health and helps reduce the risk of low bone density (osteopenia) and fragile bones (osteoporosis). Women with Swyer syndrome do not produce eggs (ova), but if they have a uterus, they may be able to become pregnant with a donated egg or embryo.
in reading the above article, it appears that for the most part babies with Swyer syndrome are raised as girls ... they are given hormone replacement therapy at an early age ... female hormones.
Not sure what would happen if the baby was raised as a boy and given male hormones ??? Do the medical professionals just assume female because the baby "looks" like a girl at birth ... yet has XY chromosomes at the 23rd pairing???
Seems to me that XY = male ... however, I cannot answer for the health professionals who make the decision at the time of birth.
Matthew 19:4 And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female
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how, they got the results was in the video. But I'm going to take your advice as to why both female and male identical twin where
Born with xy chromosomes
Just another question is it possible this can happen in many births but only one egg doesn't survive or develop further