February
13
  8:40:24 PM

IVF boys may inherit infertility

The first evidence that the fathers of test-tube babies may pass on their fertility problems has been discovered in a new study. It was found that boys conceived by the implantation of a single sperm cell into an egg using IVF were likely to develop shorter fingers, an indicator known to be associated with infertility. This new finding may be an indicator of a generation with less chance of having their own children.

In Britain, almost one in 50 babies is conceived through artificial means. Almost half are conceived using intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), a process that bypasses the competition that occurs between proportionally healthier and unhealthier sperm in natural fertilisation. Only the healthiest sperm cell will fertilise a given egg during natural fertilisation, whereas ICSI bypasses this process. The result is that unhealthier sperm may be forced into an egg, leading to a higher percentage chance of defects such as infertility. ~ Sunday Times, Feb 7




 

 Search BioEdge

 Subscribe to BioEdge newsletter
rss Subscribe to BioEdge RSS feed

 Best of the web

 Recent Posts
Indian surrogate for US woman dies in Gurjarat
18 May 2012
Do reproductive rights survive gender reassignment?
19 May 2012
South African activists begin euthanasia campaign
19 May 2012
70 assisted suicides in Washington state in 2011
19 May 2012
Would-be grandparents pay for their daughters’ egg freezing
19 May 2012

 Tags
sex selection, US, human drama, Down syndrome, neuroscience, sperm donation, UK, clinical trials, Australia, surrogacy, abortion, law, IVF, research, embryonic stem cells, suicide, India, bioethics, euthanasia, stem cells, assisted suicide, Netherlands, genetic testing, organ donation, informed consent, organ trafficking, China, organ transplants, commercialization, Canada,