Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_I - Infertility Family Science
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 101    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Infertility Family Science:     more books (48)
  1. Strong family and low fertility:a paradox?: New perspectives in interpreting contemporary family and reproductive behaviour (European Studies of Population)
  2. Treating Male Infertility: New Possibilities (Progress in Reproductive Biology and Medicine) by Giovanni M. Colpi, 1994-04
  3. Infertility: A Practical Guide for the Physician by Mary G. Hammond, 1992-04
  4. Infertility in the Male
  5. Male Contraception: A Choice on the Horizon by R.J Aitken, B.T. Hinton, et all 2004-07-02
  6. The Politics of Fertility Control: Family Planning & Abortion Policies in the American States by Deborah R. McFarlane, Kenneth J. Meier, 2000-12-01
  7. Male Infertility--Men Talking by Mary-Clai Mason, 1993-11-15
  8. Without Child: Challenging the Stigma of Childlessness by Laurie Lisle, 1999-10
  9. Conquering Infertility: Dr. Alice Domar's Mind/Body Guide to Enhancing Fertility and Coping With Infertility by Alice D. Domar, 2002-09-30
  10. Infertility - Males and Female (Research Reports in Materials Science)
  11. Infertility, Feminism, and the New Technologies (Fabian Pamphlet,) by Sally Keeble, 1994-01
  12. Making Parents: The Ontological Choreography of Reproductive Technologies (Inside Technology) by Charis Thompson, 2007-03-30
  13. Women Without a Shadow: Maternal Desire and Assisted Reproductive Technologies by Silvia Tubert, 2004-07-30
  14. What Are Children For? by Laurie Taylor, Matthew Taylor, 2005-08

21. Science Blog -- NIEHS And U.C. Davis Researchers Find Protein That May Be Key To
From NIH/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Find ProteinThat May Be Key To NonHormonal family Planning And Treatment Of infertility
http://www.scienceblog.com/community/older/1998/B/199801867.html
From: NIH/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
NIEHS And U.C. Davis Researchers Find Protein That May Be Key To Non-Hormonal Family Planning And Treatment Of Infertility
Researchers at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the University of California at Davis report that one of the body's approximately 70,000 proteins, called fertilin-beta, is essential for bringing together sperm and egg for fertilization. The research team, led by Chunghee Cho of UC-Davis, presented findings that will be a milestone in understanding how a new life begins. The researchers believe this finding can pave the way for a non-hormonal approach to family planning and the diagnosis and treatment of some types of infertility. Twenty years of work by the UC-Davis investigators established that fertilin-beta plays an important role in fusion of the sperm to the egg in fertilization. In this latest study, a collaboration with NIEHS scientists, mice were produced with a knockout of the fertilin-beta gene. The investigators were not surprised that sperm from these mice were unable to fuse with eggs. However, they did not expect to find that the sperm could not travel up the oviduct or bind to the zona pellucida, the envelope surrounding the egg. The study, which appears in the journal Science, Vol. 281, pp. 1857-1859, was authored by Chunghee Cho, Ph.D.; Paul Primakoff, Ph.D.; and Diana G. Myles, Ph.D., all of University of California, Davis; and Eugenia H. Goulding; Edward M. Eddy, Ph.D.; and Donna O'Dell Bunch, Ph.D., of the Laboratory of Reproductive and Developmental Toxicology, NIEHS; and Jean-Emmanuel Faure, Ph.D., Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon, Lyon, France.

22. House Of Commons - Science And Technology - Written Evidence
There are no available data on the use of infertility services by minority Sons remain economically and socially part of the family of origin and have a
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200405/cmselect/cmsctech/7/7we65.htm
Search Advanced Search Home
Glossary

Index
...
Parliament Live

section... Parliamentary Publications and Archives Site Map Bills Hansard Directories Frequently Asked Questions Judicial Work Select Committee on Science and Technology Written Evidence
APPENDIX 58
Memorandum from Dr Lorraine Culley, De Montfort University
I NFERTILITY AND M INORITY E THNIC C OMMUNITIES An extensive collection of studies show that involuntary childlessness can be a devastating experience for many; with significant consequences for social and psychological well-being. However, research has mostly been carried out with middle class, white, treatment-seekers and consistently ignored non-treatment seekers, those accessing treatments other than IVF, those in lower socioeconomic groups and those from "non-white" ethnic groups.[
Inequalities in health between and within ethnic groups have become an increasing focus of research in Britain. However, studies of ethnicity and reproduction have tended to concentrate on childbirth and contraception rather than infertility. There is therefore, a dearth of literature on the way in which infertility might be experienced by people from minority ethnic communities, especially in the UK. There are no available data on the use of infertility services by minority ethnic groups in the UK. The collection and analysis of ethnicity data in the NHS is still patchy and much infertility treatment takes place in the private sector.
According to the 2001 Census, the size of the minority ethnic population was 4.6 million or 7.9% of the total population of the United Kingdom. Over 2.3 million people described their ethnic origin as Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi or "Other Asian" and a significant percentage of this population are in the childbearing age group.

23. House Of Commons - Science And Technology - Written Evidence
Memorandum from the British infertility Counselling Association in relationto infertility issues and the acceptance of diverse family structures and
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200405/cmselect/cmsctech/7/7we37.htm
Search Advanced Search Home
Glossary

Index
...
Parliament Live

section... Parliamentary Publications and Archives Site Map Bills Hansard Directories Frequently Asked Questions Judicial Work Select Committee on Science and Technology Written Evidence
APPENDIX 32
Memorandum from the British Infertility Counselling Association
I NTRODUCTION
As a counselling association, BICA's position in relation to changes in legislation and new developments in human reproductive technologies is one essentially of neutrality, in keeping with the values of counselling ie the non-judgmental acceptance of and respect for all individuals. In previous responses to Government consultations, BICA has stressed the equal concern held by its members for the interests and needs of all those affected by reproductive technologies.
BICA's primary concerns are therefore in relation to the provision of counselling as currently legislated and interpreted but we are also commenting on more general issues of equality and non-discrimination.
P RIORITY I SSUES
    — Clear separation of the assessment requirements for "Welfare of the Child" from the provision of professional counselling services.

24. Sociology Of The Family: Investigating Family Issues - Allyn & Bacon / Longman C
Wesley R. Burr, Using Theories in family science. infertility Issues andOpinions. Margarete Sandelowski, Separate, But Less Unequal. 12.family Violence
http://www.ablongman.com/catalog/academic/product/0,1144,0023096721-TOC,00.html
Select a Discipline Anthropology Counseling Criminal Justice Deaf Studies / Deaf Education Education: ELL Education: Early Childhood Education Education: Foundations / Intro to Teaching Education: Instructional Technology Education: Special Education English: Composition English: Developmental English: Technical Communication History Humanities Interdisciplinary Studies Philosophy Political Science Psychology Religion Social Work / Family Therapy Sociology by Keyword by Author by Title by ISBN Advanced Search View Cart ABOUT THIS PRODUCT Description Table of Contents Features Appropriate Courses PACKAGE OPTIONS Valuepack(s) RESOURCES Student Instructor Course-Specific Discipline-Specific RELATED TITLES Sociology of Family (Sociology) Sociology of the Family: Investigating Family Issues View Larger Image Lee D. Millar Bidwell Longwood College
Brenda J. Vander Mey Clemson University
ISBN: 0-02-309672-1
Format: Cloth; 540 pp
Our Price: $88.60
Status: Instock
Published: 12/14/1999
Add to Cart Instructor Exam Copy Print Product Information Table of Contents I.SOCIOLOGY OF THE FAMILY: THE FOUNDATIONS.

25. Andrology — Clinical Services
Current research projects include the genetics of male infertility, Animal science with a minor in family science from Brigham Young University in 1996.
http://uuhsc.utah.edu/andrology/clinical_services_8.html
The Andrology Laboratory at the University of Utah has been providing infertility services since 1978. In the beginning, the laboratory consisted of a traveling lab brought to Salt Lake City every Wednesday. Over the years it has expanded to include the clinical laboratory, an IVF laboratory, a community laboratory and a research laboratory.
The first IVF procedure was performed in 1982. Since that time, over 2500 IVF and GIFT procedures have taken place. The first micromanipulation procedure in the state of Utah took place in 1990. Micromanipulation procedures such as ICSI, assisted hatching and PGD were pioneered in the state of Utah at the University of Utah and are now done routinely.
Over the years the Andrology program has won many honors of distinction. In 1989, "American Health" magazine listed the IVF program at the University of Utah as the "top" IVF program in the United States. Research papers have won the award of "best paper" for the Journal of the American Urological Association and Archives of Andrology. Research on aneuploidy in sperm and eggs began in 1998,leading to the development of the first and only Pre-implantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD) program in the state of Utah.

26. RedNova News - Science - A Gene Behind Both Infertility And Contraception
This activation process is controlled by a family of genes, He says he willstudy the role of the FoXo3a gene in human infertility when he begins work
http://www.rednova.com/news/science/6403/a_gene_behind_both_infertility_and_cont
ANDP("ntn"); Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_xp1='';Ads_yp1='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;Ads_channels='';
SPECIAL NEWS
Return to Flight
REDNOVA NEWS
Space Science Technology Health ... Video News
REDNOVA EXTRAS
RedNova E-Mail My RedNova Join RedNova RSS Feeds ... Tell A Friend, Win $500 Ads by Google Posted on: Friday, 11 July 2003, 06:00 CDT E-mail this to a friend Printable version Discuss this story in the forum Change Font Size: A A A
A Gene Behind Both Infertility and Contraception
Click to enlarge Study finds gene controls regular release of eggs By Ed Edelson, HealthDay Reporter HealthDayNews Researchers have discovered a gene that could play a part in helping both women who want to have children and those who don't and it might help fight cancer, to boot. The gene plays a central role in a network that controls the periodic release of eggs for fertilization, says a report in the July 11 issue of Science by researchers at Harvard's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Female mice bred to lack the gene had fewer and smaller litters and were infertile after 15 weeks, which is equal to early adulthood for a woman. Detailed studies found the follicles segments of the ovary that contain eggs were activated earlier in life than normal and depleted earlier.

27. RedNova News - Science - Frozen Embryos Focus In Stem Cell Debate
When they are, the couples will exchange pictures, a family history and essays . an advocacy group for families struggling with infertility.
http://www.rednova.com/news/science/156375/frozen_embryos_focus_in_stem_cell_deb
ANDP("ntn"); Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_xp1='';Ads_yp1='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;Ads_channels='';
SPECIAL NEWS
Return to Flight
REDNOVA NEWS
Space Science Technology Health ... Video News
REDNOVA EXTRAS
RedNova E-Mail My RedNova Join RedNova RSS Feeds ... Tell A Friend, Win $500 Ads by Google Posted on: Thursday, 16 June 2005, 03:00 CDT E-mail this to a friend Printable version Discuss this story in the forum Change Font Size: A A A
Frozen Embryos Focus in Stem Cell Debate
Click to enlarge WASHINGTON In politics, it always helps to put a face on a cause. For supporters of embryonic stem cell research, nobody played that role quite like Christopher Reeve, the paralyzed actor who touted the promise of such research before his death in October. Opponents of embryonic stem cell research also have found their face, 21 of them. They are the children who helped President Bush show what a frozen embryo has the potential to become. "The children here today remind us that there is no such thing as a spare embryo," Bush said last month at the White House.

28. The Science And Research Forum Is Held Annually By The Academy To
with a Public Health degree in Population and family Health science. Data from unpublished research indicates that couples with infertility can also
http://www.aafcp.org/sci_res_forum03.htm
The Science and Research Forum is held annually by the Academy to promote scientific research in areas related to the Academy. The Academy does not necessarily endorse the scientific or ethical content of any of the research presentations. INDEX TO PRESENTATIONS IN 2003 The Standard Days Method in Rural Peru The Efficacy Trial of the TwoDay Method; Preliminary Results A Comparison of the Fertile Phase As Determined by the Clearplan Easy Fertility Monitor and the Self-Assessment of Cervical Mucus Retrospective Evaluation of Outcomes of the use of the Creighton Model Fertility ... System to Achieve Pregnancy
Science and Research Forum Biosketch: Marcos Arevalo, MD, MPH , is Assistant Professor in the Department of OB-GYN, Institute for Reproductive Health, Georgetown University, Washington, DC. As Manager of Clinical Trials and Biomedical Research, he is involved in international research including in the area of natural family planning. He received his medical training in El Salvador, his MPH from Tulane University, and additional training at Georgetown University. Presentation Abstract: The Standard Days Method in Rural Peru The Standard Days Method (SDM), a 95% effective method of natural family planning based on a fixed fertile window on days 8-19 of each cycle, has been officially incorporated into the service provision of the Ministry of Health (MOH) in Peru.

29. IRELAND LOCAL.IE, Ireland Health & Science: Fertility Clinics And Information
Couples planning a family, those with difficulty in conceiving or needing Assisted Ireland Local.ie National infertility Support and Information Group
http://www.local.ie/Ireland_Health___Science/Fertility_Clinics_and_Information/
IRELAND LOCAL.IE
(ie. Ireland Locally) Ireland Local.ie Home: : Fertility Clinics and Information Websites Adoption Board
Adoption in Ireland is regulated by the Adoption Board which is an independent quasi judicial statutory body appointed by Government. Adoptions in Ireland commenced on the 1st January, 1953 with the enactment of the Adoption Act, 1952. The 1952 Act established the Adoption Board which has the sole right to grant or refuse to grant adoption orders. A Chairman and six ordinary members were appointed to the Board and the membership of the Board was subsequently increased to nine members.,
Contact: Shelbourne House, Shelbourne Road, Dublin 4, County: Dublin, tel: +353 1 6671392, fax: +353 1 6671438
Donor Conception Network

DCNetwork is a network of parents with children conceived with donated sperm eggs or embryos, adult offspring, and those contemplating or undergoing treatment. As many as one in seven couples may find it difficult to conceive a child. For some of these couples, particularly where the male partner is infertile or carries a genetic disorder, donor insemination may be their only hope of having children. Similarly where the female partner cannot produce eggs, donated eggs are used. There are approximately 2,200 children born each year in the UK to women who have conceived following treatment with donated gametes.,
Contact: Donor Conception Network

30. Out Of The Freezer, Into The Family - The Booming, And Bizarre, Business Of Embr
When patients get to the awful point in infertility treatment where IVF clearly Liza Mundy, a Washington Post staff writer and MBL science journalism
http://slate.msn.com/id/2119845/
placeAd(1,'slate.news/slate')
Print
E-mail Discuss Newsletters ... About Us
Search Slate
Advanced Search

placeAd(3,'slate.homepage/slate') placeAd(6,'slate.homepage/slate');
medical examiner Health and medicine explained.
Out of the Freezer, Into the Family

The booming, and bizarre, business of embryo adoption.
By Liza Mundy
Posted Tuesday, May 31, 2005, at 8:50 AM PT
On May 24, as the House of Representatives was preparing to vote on federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research, President Bush appeared with a prop designed to dramatize his opposition. The prop was a baby—21 babies, rather, former frozen embryos that had been relinquished by their biological parents and gestated by other couples. The president wanted to show what an embryo can grow up to be if it doesn't grow up to be a stem-cell line; that there are other options, aside from eternal replication in a Petri dish, for the nation's half-million frozen embryos that are left over from in-vitro fertilization procedures. What the president did not seem to know was that for months the U.S. Food and Drug Administration had been preparing new tissue-testing restrictions that would make embryo donation impossible, foreclosing the very option he was holding up before the cameras. But somebody, apparently, realized this in the nick of time. Shortly before the stem-cell vote went forward, an amendment to the new FDA rules was quietly announced, noting that a strict infectious-disease-testing requirement would be waived for donated embryos. Clinics, which had been braced to shut down their donation programs, suddenly found the problem had evaporated. "It was an eleventh-hour reprieve," says Diahn Oakley, spokeswoman for the National Embryo Donation Center, who began frantically e-mailing fertility clinics to let them know.

31. Meet The Medical Staff At The Mena Medical Center, In Mena, Arkansas.
Residency family Practice at University of Arkansas for Medical science at Lt . Specializes in infertility and family Planning, Incontinence, Menopause,
http://www.menamedical.com/MedStaff/medstaff.html
Ronald W. Beckel, Jr. M.D.
Specialty- Pediatrics
Board Certification- American Academy of Pediatrics
Medical School - Medical School- UAMS at Lt.Rock, Ark
Residency- Arkansas Children's Hospital at Lt. Rock
Address- 102 Crestwood Circle Mena
Telephone- 479-394-7301 David D. Brown, M.D. P.A.
Specialty- General Practice/Geriatric Practice
Medical School - UTESA, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
UAMS, El Dorado, Ark. Internship, Partial Residency, Family Practice
Provides Cosmetic Procedure, Skin Lesion evaluation/ biopsy/ removal/ treatment Address-1302 Hwy 71 North Mena and Main Street in Norman, Arkansas Telephone- 479-394-3718 in Mena and 870-334-3104 in Norman Andrew E. David, M.D. Specialty- Emergency Medicine Medical School- University of Arkansas for Medical Science at Lt. Rock, Ark Residency- Family Practice at University of Arkansas for Medical Science at Lt. Rock, Ark Address- 311 North Morrow Mena Medical Center Mena Telephone-479-394-6100 John H. Finck, M.D.

32. Support From Health Care Providers And The Psychological Adjustment Of Individua
Human Development and family science at The Ohio State University, Columbus . Participants One hundred twenty individuals experiencing infertility
http://jognn.awhonn.org/cgi/content/abstract/33/5/597
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ... TABLE OF CONTENTS QUICK SEARCH: [advanced] Author:
Keyword(s):
Year: Vol: Page:
This Article Full Text Full Text (PDF) Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in ISI Web of Science Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Reprints and Permissions PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Brucker, P. S. Articles by McKenry, P. C. JOGNN
AWHONN, the Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses

DOI: 10.1177/0884217504268943
Clinical Research
Support From Health Care Providers and the Psychological Adjustment of Individuals Experiencing Infertility
Penny S. Brucker and Patrick C. McKenry Penny S. Brucker, PhD, is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute for Health Services Research and Policy Studies, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL.
Patrick C. McKenry, PhD, is a professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Science at The Ohio State University, Columbus. Address for correspondence: Penny S. Brucker, PhD, 339 E. Chicago Avenue, 717 Wieboldt Hall, The Institute for Health Services Research and Policy Studies, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611. E-mail: Objective: To examine the relationship between support from health care providers and psychological adjustment for men and women experiencing infertility.

33. Project MUSE
Coming to Grips with the Limitations of science infertility and Heredity in We need not detail here the emergence of the domestic family and its
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/reviews_in_american_history/v025/25.2sanchez.html
How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
Access Restricted
This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information.
Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on Morantz-Sanchez, Regina Markell "Coming to Grips with the Limitations of Science: Infertility and Heredity in American History"
Reviews in American History - Volume 25, Number 2, June 1997, pp. 207-212
The Johns Hopkins University Press

Excerpt
The Empty Cradle
, a book on the history of infertility, which joins Elaine May's "Barren in The Promised Land" (1995) as only the second published historical work on a virtually unexplored topic, are sisters, one an established historian and the other an accomplished gynecologist. This unusual combination has resulted in a book that manages to treat sensitively both culture and medicine. We learn that the use of medical technology to cope with involuntary childlessness has been occurring for almost 150 years. What has altered over time is technique, knowledge, and social context. Ronner and Walsh emphasize that changing attitudes toward the family, marriage, sexuality, sex roles

34. Home Page
WMF (16534 bytes) HHS Consumer and family science Links FD00643_. parenting andteen centers, sensitive topics like infertility, anorexia,
http://www.ouhsd.k12.ca.us/lmc/hhs/Foods.htm
HHS Consumer and Family Science Links Consumer Action Autoweb.com Federal Citizen Information Center FirstGov for Consumers Federal Citizen Information Center-National Contact Center ... Consumer Protection Nutrition Interactive Healty Eating Index Food Pyramid Guide A Guide to Daily Food Choices USDA Food and Nutrition Information Center
This is the place to go for all types of information about nutrition, food composition, dietary guidelines, and all manner of other data about food. If you want to know exactly how many calories, how much protein, fat, carbohydrates, cholestrol, etc. a 1.5 oz. cake donut contains, you'll find it here. Would you like to compare the composition of a Taco Bell beef burrito with the same item at Del Taco? You can do so here using the USDA's search engine that includes more than 19,000 food items. Nutrition Navigator
The Tufts University Nutrition Navigator claims to solve the two major problems Web users have when seeking nutrition information: how to quickly find information best suited to their needs and whether to trust the information they find there. The Tufts University Nutrition Navigator is designed to help one sort through the large volume of nutrition information on the Internet and find accurate, useful nutrition information he or she can trust. Recipes: AllRecipies.com:

35. IPL General/Reference Collection: Women's Health
Pregnancy, family and Motherhood, Arts Humanities, Computers science, The site has a Midlife Health, Gynecologic Health, and infertility Center
http://www.ipl.org.ar/ref/RR/static/hea64.00.00.html
the Internet Public Library
Women's Health Resources
Health matters unique to female physiology. Show Me Associations Serials in this category. Subcategories of Women's Health are:
Breast Cancer
Cervical Dysplasia
Endometriosis
Menopause ...
Menstruation
Resources in this category are:
About.Com: Women's Health
http://womenshealth.about.com
An Internet guide to women's health issues, with feature articles, Website guides, and discussion forums. Topics covered include contraception, breast cancer, menstruation, exercise, fertility, menopause, and more.
Author: Tracee Cornforth (womenshealth.guide@about.com)
Subjects:
allHealth.com
http://www.allhealth.com/
Features articles on a wide range of health topics, including cancer, depression, sexual health, and sleep disorders. There are also health news items, a section of interactive online tools, and an ask the expert section where users send in questions for various practitioners to answer.
Author: iVillage.com: The Women's Network
Subjects:
Asian Pacific Islanders Women's Health
http://www.apanet.org/~fdala/
"This multi-lingual site offers several languages to help Asian Pacific Islander women understand the importance of having mammograms and pap smears at regular intervals. There is information about how to make appointments and prepare for the procedures. Clinicians will find special materials they can use to personally recommend mammography and pap smears to their patients."

36. Strong IVF Families To Gather On May 9 - URMC Press Room
couples who dream of having a family but are dealing with infertility,” Lewisadded. Established in 1984, the Strong Fertility and Reproductive science
http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/pr/news/story.cfm?id=243

37. Egg Donation, PGD, Infertility Treatment, Artificial Insemination
Provides the highest quality, comprehensive infertility and reproductive The Reproductive science Institute’s donor egg program was established in 1993
http://www.rsiinfertility.com/egg.htm
fertility Provides fertility, PGD, and reproductive immunology . ICSI is a treatment for male factor infertility. Male factor infertility is characterized by low sperm numbers, abnormally shaped sperm, and/or compromised sperm swimming ability (low motility). In addition, ICSI may be used for patients who have experienced failed fertilization in a previous IVF cycle. Even when no sperm are present in the ejaculate, sperm can be retrieved from the testis by a urologist and ICSI performed to achieve fertilization . ICSI is a sophisticated microscopic surgical technique performed by an experienced embryologist. Eggs are first retrieved and placed in a tiny drop in a dish. While viewing the egg and sperm through a microscope, a single sperm is captured in a fine glass needle and injected through the eggshell and into the center of the egg (cytoplasm). Successful fertilization is evaluated the following day. Three to five days after ICSI, the physician transfers embryos into the womanís uterus. In addition, there is a 90% success rate with an even higher success rate on some PGD testing. There is an error rate of 10%, which would include false negative and false positive results. There is also a possibility that cells from the same embryo might have a differing number of chromosomes. It is therefore, possible that the cell for PGD testing is normal, while another cell in the same embryo is abnormal.

38. Perspectives Press: The Infertility And Adoption Publisher
To this cacophony, I add one infertility counselor and adoptive mother s perspective . Wonderously, science comes full circle when the unintentional
http://www.perspectivespress.com/item.asp?recordid=embryoadoption&pagestyle=defa

39. Spiked-science | Article | 'People Have All Kinds Of Fertility Needs'
Yet already, people are using science to select genetic characteristics This way, if a couple chooses to select a female embryo, another family can
http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/00000006D91B.htm
All in the hormones?
Vivienne Parry talks to Helene Guldberg
ASBOs: Politicians behaving badly
by Dolan Cummings
Search for in All Sections central politics IT science liberties risk culture health life essays SECTIONS central politics IT science ... essays ISSUES War on Iraq
After 11 September

spiked-proposals

Global warming
...
Food scares

Go to: spiked-central spiked-science
Article
5 June 2002 Printer-friendly version Email a friend 'People have all kinds of fertility needs' by Tessa Mayes
Professor Gedis Grudzinskas, medical director at the London fertility treatment centre, The Bridge Centre, and the Centre for Reproductive Medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital, talked to Tessa Mayes about why the British regulations on 'sex selection' of babies should be loosened up. 'People choose their partner's physical, intellectual and other characteristics in everyday life all the time - so the issue of whether technology can help people with fertility problems to do this has always been on their agenda. 'Currently, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) forbids the selection of the gender of an embryo during infertility treatment if the couple wants to do this for social reasons (rather than to select embryos without genetic diseases, for example).

40. UNTSHC Clinic Digital Library
Patient/family Resources by Specialty Urology. Male infertility Patient/familyResources. Spanish Miscellaneous. See also
http://unthsc-dl.slis.ua.edu/patientinfo/urology/infertility/infertility.htm
Patient/Family Resources by Specialty: Urology
Male Infertility Patient/Family Resources
Spanish Miscellaneous See also:

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 101    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter