As a Sacramento area fertility doctor who regularly helps patients struggling with infertility get pregnant with the help of in vitro fertilization (IVF), Dr. Zeringue said. “Dr. Robert Edwards’ win of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Medicine highlights just how far advanced reproductive therapy has come since the first succesful IVF, “test tube” baby was born in 1978“.
Because of his work, the once revoluntionary and seemingly impossible task of fertilizing eggs outside of the womb is now commonplace at fertility centers across the country and around the world.
However, even as reproductive technology moves into new and exciting areas like the pre-implantation genetic screening of embryos (PGS), we will more than likely never get to look completely “under the hood” or know exactly why some people’s eggs and sperm just don’t seem to work. In many ways, this lack of knowing is what binds fertility experts with couples struggling to get pregnant.
Everyone is looking for a “glimpse behind the curtain” to find out why the magic and mystery of conception and child birth seems evasive to some potential parents. It is this basic human link between cutting edge fertility science and a woman’s need to have a child that will drive the newest innovations in reproductive technology.
As Dr. Edward’s probably knows, the latest technological advances may never compete with seeing the joy patients feel when they are finally pregnant and on their way to having a baby.
Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CaliforniaIvfDavisFertilityCenterInc/~3/ejWC_fJ1A_4/nobel-prize-for-ivf-pioneer-highlights.html