HealthScout Channels
Home |  Today | Women| Men| Kids| Seniors| Diseases| Addictions| Sex & Relationships| Diet, Fitness, Looks| Alternative Medicine| Drug Checker
 
 
 Printer Friendly  Send to a Friend

Freezing Ovaries Preserves Fertility, Scientists Report

New technique could help cancer patients or women who want to delay childbirth

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter


Related Encyclopedia
 border=
Adenocarcinoma of the Lung and Brain Metastases
AIDS and HIV Infection
Amenorrhea
Amniocentesis
More...

Related Healthscout Videos
 border=
A Welcome Message from Survivor PJ Hamel
Smother Says "Cut!"
Maryann and Paula
When's the Next Free Mammogram Day? October 17, 2008!!!
More...

Related Animations
 border=
Breast Reduction
Breast Self-Exam Video
Colon Cancer
Erectile Dysfunction
More...

Related Drug Information
 border=
Actonel
Cialis
Detrol LA
Diflucan
More...

Related News Articles
 border=
New Drug May Work Better Against Chemo Side Effects
Hormone Therapy May Cut Colorectal Cancer Risk
Caring Through Sharing -- Life Changing Stories
Gene Predicts Childhood Leukemia Relapse
More...

MONDAY, Nov. 10 (HealthDay News) -- Scientists are reporting the ability to freeze and transplant ovaries, a development that could help preserve fertility in women facing cancer therapy.

"We can transplant ovaries without any loss of ovarian tissue or eggs, and it functions perfectly normally whether it's fresh or frozen," said co-researcher Dr. Sherman Silber, director of the Infertility Center of St. Louis at St. Luke's Hospital.

Text Continues Below



Silber said the technique could also be used by women who want to delay having children. He reported the findings Nov. 10 at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine annual meeting, in San Francisco.

In one paper, Silber reported that he and his colleagues had transplanted an ovary from one identical twin to her twin sister, allowing the twin with premature ovarian failure to conceive a child. One year after the transplant, the twin with the transplanted ovary had become pregnant.

But, Silber said, the ability to remove an ovary, freeze it and put it back into the same woman represents the real breakthrough. "We can freeze the ovaries of young women who are going to lose their fertility over time and transplant them back later, and they [the ovaries] won't have aged," he explained.

The technique can benefit cancer patients about to undergo radiation, chemotherapy or bone marrow transplant, which would leave them sterile, Silber said. "But if we take the ovary out, freeze it, save it and transplant it back later, they will be fertile again," he said.

Currently, women can have their eggs frozen and put back after cancer treatment is complete, Silber noted. "But there are disadvantages," he said. "If you put all those eggs in one basket, and she goes through IVF [in vitro fertilization], she can't have any better chance of pregnancy than 50 percent. If she is not pregnant from that, then she's finished."

Page:  1 | 2 | Next >>

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 11/10/2008

Related Links
 border=
From Healthscout's partner site on breast cancer, MyBreastCancerNetwork.com
VIDEO: Chemo booster cuts treatment time by two months
SYMPTOMS: Learn what to look for and what the symptoms mean
PROGNOSIS: Early detection and new treatments improve survival rates




SOURCES: Sherman Silber, M.D., director, Infertility Center of St. Louis at St. Luke's Hospital; Richard J. Paulson, M.D., professor of obstetrics and gynecology, chief, Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles; Nov. 10, 2008, presentation, annual meeting, American Society for Reproductive Medicine, San Francisco


Healthscout Search
Health Tools
 Chemotherapy: Eating Adivce
 Chemotherapy Myths
 Chemotherapy Guide
 Stages of Chemotherapy
 Post-Chemo Accessories
Resources
Healthscout News
Health Videos
Quizzes & Tools
Health Encyclopedia
Library & Communities
Newsletter Subscription
News Archive
PR Newswire News Video Releases
Privacy Policy

We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information:
verify here.
About The HealthScout Network Contact Us
Copyright © 2001-2009. The HealthCentralNetwork, Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy  Terms of Service