A teenager has spoken of her ‘total shock’ at being told at the age of 17 she had no vagina. Jacqui Beck, 19, has Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser aka MRKH, a rare syndrome which affects the reproductive system – meaning she has no womb, cervix or vaginal opening. She was only diagnosed after she went to her GP about back pain – and mentioned in passing that she hadn’t started her periods.
Tests
revealed her condition and that where her vagina should be, there is
simply an ident, or ‘dimple’ – meaning she is unable to have sex or
carry her own child. Women
with the condition appear completely normal externally - which means it
is usually not discovered until a woman tries to have sex, or has not
had her first period. Beck, from the Isle of Wight, admits when she was first diagnosed, she felt ‘like a freak’.
‘I’d never considered myself different from other women and the news was so shocking, I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.I
was sure the doctor had got it wrong, but when she
explained that was why I wasn’t having periods, it all started to make sense. ‘She then explained that I would never be able to carry a child and might have to have surgery before I could have sex. I left the doctors in tears – I would never know what it was like to give birth, be pregnant, have a period. All the things I had imagined doing suddenly got erased from my future.
explained that was why I wasn’t having periods, it all started to make sense. ‘She then explained that I would never be able to carry a child and might have to have surgery before I could have sex. I left the doctors in tears – I would never know what it was like to give birth, be pregnant, have a period. All the things I had imagined doing suddenly got erased from my future.
Women
with MRKH appear completely normal externally - which means it is often
not discovered in childhood, but in the teenage years
‘I
was really angry and felt like I wasn’t a real woman any more.’ Beck
was admitted to the Queen Charlotte and Chelsea Hospital in London,
which specialises in the condition, where she was given dilation
treatment, which involved using different sized dilators to try and
stretch her vaginal canal – but was told if it didn’t work, she would
have to be operated on.
She
said: ‘I spent two days there, getting taught how to use the dilator
and learning more about MRKH. ‘The first time the nurse showed me how to
use a dilator I nearly died of embarrassment. But now I’ve got used to
it, I see it as any other form of treatment.