Search     for          [ Advanced Search ]


    Browse   Add Article/Listing   What's Top   What's New   Featured   Tell a Friend   FAQ



  Categories

    News (990)
    Jobs & Resumes (52)
    Image Database (209)
    IVF Mail (660)
    Reviews (65)
    Links (103)
    Books & Videos (49)
    Clinics (231)
    Embryology courses (33)
    Tutorials (8)
    IVF Podcasts (13)


  Sponsors

1.  ac-tive (IVF)
2.  CRi (Oosight)
3.  Cryolock
4.  Hamilton Thorne Research
5.  IVFonline
6.  MediCult
7.  Mellowood Medical Clinic Software
8.  Research Instruments
9.  Zander IVF


  Clinic Sponsors

1.  Jinemed Hospital, Turkey


  Featured Listings


Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Current Accomplishments and New Horizons


Handbook of the Assisted Reproduction Laboratory


  Recently Viewed

1.  Belgian team has second ovarian transplant success
2.  A Textbook of in Vitro Fertilization and Assisted Reproduction: the Bourn Hall Guide to Clinical and Laboratory Practice
3.  BlastFreeze
4.  Abnormal spermatozoon under scanned microscope
5.  Abnormal oocytes
6.  Canadian MPs finally vote on ART legislation
7.  Centre for assisted reproduction "Embryo"
8.  Blastocisto
9.  Alpha - Scientists in Reproductive Medicine
10.  Advanced Fertility Center of Chicago


  IVF Journals



  IVF Support

1.  Resolve
2.  Infertility Network UK
3.  American Infertility Association
4.  Fertile Hope
5.  Egg Freezing
6.  Fertility Connect
7.  e-Infertility Network
8.  INCIID
9.  NISIG – Ireland


  IVF Tutorials

 
IVF


IVF > News

Belgian team has second ovarian transplant success

Dr. Kirsty Horsey
Progress Educational Trust
29 March 2005
Discuss this article Read comments Add to favorites

[BioNews, London] Researchers at the University of Louvain in Brussels, Belgium, say that a second woman there has had a successful ovarian tissue transplant. The 28-year old woman - who had ovarian tissue removed in 1999 before undergoing radiotherapy for sickle-cell anaemia, a treatment that can render women infertile - has started to menstruate again after the transplant procedure.



Strips of ovarian tissue were removed from the woman before the radiotherapy treatment. These were cut into sections and frozen in liquid nitrogen. In August 2004, some of the tissue was thawed and transplanted back to one of the woman's non-functioning ovaries and the woman's menstrual cycle returned in January 2005, showing that the tissue transplant was successful.



Last September, the first baby was born following an ovarian tissue transplant, to another Belgian woman, 32-year-old Ouarda Touirat. At the time, there was some doubt about whether the restoration of Ms Touirat's menstrual cycle, and thus her fertility, was a result of the transplant procedure or a natural return of the ovary to its functioning state.



Professor Jacques Donnez, leader of the Belgian research team, presented the new research at the annual conference of the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) in London. The research was first reported in Venice at the 12th World Congress on Human Reproduction. Donnez said that the woman was not yet pregnant, but her menstrual cycle had started again and the signs were that her reproductive function had returned. He told the conference that the woman was delighted with how her treatment had gone so far: 'She didn't menstruate for two years and the first time she started bleeding again she knew she was still a woman and she was very pleased', he said. He also said that 'we are hoping that she will now be able to become pregnant like the last patient, but we do not know how long that may take'.



Professor Alan Trounson, a fertility expert and stem cell researcher at Monash University in Australia, described Professor Donnez's latest success as 'fantastic', adding 'it gives strong credibility to what he has been doing'.



http://www.BioNews.org.uk
BioNews@progress.org.uk
© Copyright 2008 Progress Educational Trust

Reproduced from BioNews with permission, a web- and email-based source of news, information and comment on assisted reproduction and human genetics, published by Progress Educational Trust.


Page Views: 59

 

Average Visitor Rating:    5.00 (out of 5)
Number of Ratings: 2 Votes
Rate This Article:
 Visitor comments (0)
Discuss this article Write a comment

(No comments found. You may write the first one!)





  IVF Jobs



IVF Jobs | Resumes

Click here to post your
job announcement



  Latest Listings

1.  Obesity is not a threat to successful IVF
2.  Third Yazd International Student Award and Congress in Reproductive Medicine
3.  10th International Congress on Reproductive Biomedicine
4.  Correction - 5th Congress on Stem Cell Biology & Technology
5.  5th International Congress on Stem Cell Biology & Technology
6.  10th Royan International Research Award on Reproductive Biomedicine & Stem Cell Biotechnology
7.  Clinical Fellowship in Andrology and Reproductive Medicine


  Featured



  IVF Newsletter

Subscribe for the latest IVF news and announcements.
name
email
add   remove  


  Most Popular

1.  IVF Ethics Questionnaire [Results]
2.  Girl or boy? It's in dad's genes
3.  Fertility drugs linked to increased cancer risk
4.  Embryo quality and grading: The good, the bad or the ugly?
5.  In Vitro Fertilization
6.  Research links intelligence to sperm quality
7.  Fertility patients' indecision about fate of stored embryos


  Talk to us



Name:  

E-mail:  



  IVF Videos

1.  Lysed Cell Removal
2.  Embryonic Division
3.  Professor Robert Edwards
4.  Embryo Metabolomics



Search Listings | Place Listings | Edit Listings | My Profile | My Favorites | Auto Notify | Sitemap | FAQ |
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Tell Your Friends | Refund Policy | ROR/RSS | Sponsorship and Advertising


embryo
Copyright © 1997-2009, IVF.net. All Rights Reserved.