New method of treating infertility for women
American scientists have developed a new technique, capable of helping millions of infertile women to fulfill their motherhood dreams by stimulating eggs from their barren ovaries to grow in the laboratory.
The Telegraph reported, extracting cells from the ovaries and exposing them to growth-promoting chemicals in the lab, the team from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina (USA). ) was able to produce young eggs, capable of being re-implanted into the body to undergo natural fertilization.
The method is designed to help millions of women with ovarian disease, such as polycystic ovary (PCOS), a syndrome in which ovarian cells are defective, leading to an imbalance in hormones. sex, causing abnormalities in the ovaries and reducing the number of eggs in the ovaries.
In their experiments, the team isolated ovarian cells from 3-week-old female mice - equivalent to extracting ovarian cells in 25-year-old women. When these cells are nourished in the laboratory, they begin to grow into young egg cells.
The researchers were optimistic that these immature oocytes could develop perfectly to a certain stage in normal humans before being transplanted back into the female patient's body or in vitro fertilization ( IVF).
Although this research is only at the beginning, it opens up the prospect of new methods to treat infertility and infertility in women.
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