A Los Angeles couple filed a complaint on Monday, November 78 against a clinic specializing in in vitro fertilization (IVF) after realizing that two fertilized eggs had been exchanged and that they had given birth to the child of a other family.
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When Daphna and Alexander Cardinale first saw their newborn baby in September 2019, they immediately noticed that the little girl had darker skin and hair than the rest of the family, their lawyers say.
“Genetic testing revealed that the baby Alexander and Daphna had delivered and raised for several months was not genetically related to them. Their baby was the biological child of complete strangers, ”
continues Peiffer Wolf.
According to the lawsuit filed Monday in a Los Angeles court, the embryos of two unrelated couples were exchanged, presumably negligently, and implanted in the uterus of the woman who was not there. egg donor.
After the discovery of this error, the two couples got acquainted and decided to take back custody of their genetic child, an exchange now formalized by the courts.
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But the error left traces and suffering, argues the Cardinale couple in their complaint, which seeks damages.
“The birth of our daughter should have been one of the happiest times of my life. But I was immediately shaken and disturbed by the fact that I didn't recognize her, ”
said Alexander Cardinale.
“When the truth came out, swapping the kids made it even more upsetting. Losing the child you know for the genetic child you don't yet know is truly an impossible nightmare
,
”he
says.
IVF involves the insemination in the laboratory of an egg with a sperm, the fertilized egg being subsequently re-implanted in the mother's uterus.
The process is often used by couples who are having difficulty conceiving, and it can also include donation of an egg, sperm, or both.