The weekend procedures were completed by more than 10 surgeons at Sweden's University of Gothenburg.
The names of the patients have not been revealed.
Doctors caution they will not consider the operations successful unless the women achieve pregnancy.
"We are not going to call it a complete success until this
results in children," said Michael Olausson, one of the Swedish surgeons
told The Associated Press.
"That's the best proof."
Both women started in-vitro fertilisation before the surgery,
he said, adding that their frozen embryos will be thawed and
transferred if the women are considered in good enough health after a
year-long observation period.
Up and walking
Both recipients, who are aged in their 30s, were tired after the surgery but recovering well, said the university in a statement.
One had her uterus removed due to cervical cancer and the other was born without a uterus, they added
"The donating mothers are up and walking and will be
discharged from the hospital within a few days," said Mats Brannstrom, a
professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at the university.
He is the leader of a research team - comprising 20
scientists, doctors and specialists - which has been working on the
project since 1999.
Turkish doctors said they had performed a successful uterus
transplant last year, giving a womb from a deceased donor to a young
woman, but Dr Olausson said he was not sure whether the recipient had
yet started undergoing fertility treatment.
The first widely reported womb transplant from a live donor
was performed in 2000, in Saudi Arabia, but the organ had to be removed
three months later because of a blood clot.
Last year, 56-year-old Eva Ottoson, who lives in
Nottinghamshire, said she hoped to become the first woman to have her
womb transplanted into her daughter, Sara, 25, who lives in Sweden and
was born without reproductive organs.
It remains unknown whether they were involved in the weekend's procedures.
Source: BBC News
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