id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_izdgxwun2va7lpu7cg3dqgmj3y Jillian Lloyd Female genital appearance: 'normality' unfolds 2005.0 .pdf text/html 12332 812 63 We are not sure whether the testes in AIS contain any viable sperm cells [Ref. 2] but if so it would seem possible, in theory at least, that these might be extracted and used to fertilize an egg donated by, say, the normal XX sister of an AIS woman's male partner? Although we understand that the use of cells as immature as spermatogonia for in vitro fertilization is not on the immediate horizon, early gonadectomy in AIS with cryopreservation (freezing) of testicular tissue might increase the chances of success, should this become possible in say 15-20 years time? A patient with the complete form of AIS (CAIS), or with Swyers Syndrome (XY gonadal dysgenesis), will always appear female externally (no ambiguity) but she is still intersexed, because she has XY chromosomes and internal testes (testicular streak gonads in the case of Swyers) that are considered at odds with her external femaleness. ./cache/work_izdgxwun2va7lpu7cg3dqgmj3y.pdf ./txt/work_izdgxwun2va7lpu7cg3dqgmj3y.txt