New breakthrough helps infertile women have children
Those who could not give birth because the ovaries were broken had new hope, after the scientists raised the world's first artificial ovaries.
The team said that this turning point will help millions of women who have suffered ovarian injury (due to chemotherapy or other therapies) can have normal babies.
In their laboratory, artificial ovaries are made up of cells of normal women of childbearing age. After that, the eggs are released into these artificial nest.
The results surprised the research team, because the artificial ovary naturally nourishes the egg like in a woman's body, and the egg has actually matured in that time to ripen enough to transplant into the uterus and conceive.
The discovery of Brown's team, USA, published in the Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics , is a joy for thousands of people with cancer who have chemotherapy, leading to ovarian failure.
Now, they can store immature eggs in a frozen form, and after being cured, they can be inserted into an artificial uterus if they want to have children.
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