January 30, 2008
GIFT And Some Infertility Answers
Tip! In fact, the symptom of not conceiving in 1 year alone is one good basis for diagnosing infertility.
Gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT) is being used when traditional infertility therapies are unsuccessful, especially in cases of endometriosis, low sperm counts and unexplained infertility. The first pregnancy using the GIFT technique occurred in 1985 and in the year that followed, patients having the procedure increased from forty seven to four hundred nineteen.
According to the IVF Registry, the overall clinical pregnancy rate in 1987 for IVF was sixteen percent, while the rate for GIFT was twenty-five percent. A recent report by the American Fertility Society puts the success rate at 26.6 percent. A variation of the GIFT technique, known as ZIFT (the Z stands for zygote) transfers the newly fertilized egg, or zygote, into the fallopian tube by laparoscopy, usually within twenty-four hours after fertilization has taken place in the laboratory.
Tip! If you fall in any of these categories, it would be wise to consult your ob/gyn or an infertility specialist.
Although there have been major advances in solving some of the problems of infertility, much more is yet to be learned. There are still couples whose infertility is unexplained and there are couples with known causes of infertility that cannot be cured. In addition, advances in technology have given rise to problems that concern hospitals and neonatologists who specialize in premature babies. Multiple births resulting from IVF and GIFT are common and when twins, triplets and even quadruplets arrive early, the costs for assuring their well-being can be extremely high.
Approximately twenty years ago, the birth of the first “test tube” baby was hailed as a miracle. Since that time, in vitro fertilization has become an accepted means of treatment throughout the Western world. In retrospect, it turns out that this procedure ushered in a new era of reproductive technology that has out distanced the ability of the learned professions and society at large to keep pace with its consequences.
Tip! Acupuncture works for infertility by increasing the production of endorphins or brain chemicals that help to reduce stress. It also improves blood supply to the ovaries, and the uterus.
The hullabaloo over “surrogate” motherhood triggered by the “Baby M” case continues to resonate in courts of law and legislatures. Fertility clinics are making money by making it possible for couples to make babies not only by providing sperm banks, but since 1990, by providing donor eggs. Donors of both sexes are forcing medical ethicists as well sociologists and jurists to confront the question not only of who is the biological parent and what are the rights of that parent, but also of how a “family” and identity itself are to be defined. The normal life cycle of women has become a matter of government involvement following the successful pregnancies of women in their late fifties. An international furor yet to be resolved was triggered by the announcement of a researcher in Scotland that it would soon be feasible for infertile women to be implanted with the ovaries taken from aborted fetuses.
Uncover The Answers To Infertility. Uncover The Answers To Infertility.
When scientists effect major changes, they are rarely expected to take responsibility for the unforeseen results of their work. Americans have a difficult time confronting the fact that “progress” always has its price, that everything has the defects of its virtues. For the infertile couples who achieve parenthood because of unanticipated advances in the technology of reproduction, these advances have been a blessing. Whether they have been an unmixed blessing for society at large will be decided in the legislative bodies and law courts, which reflect the changing attitudes of the general population on how families are created.
Overcoming Male Infertility Infertility effects almost 6. 1 million Americans - large, desperate market. Offer them help to overcome male infertility.
|
Michael Russell |




















