Thanks to IVF, infertile men are begetting infertile sons

The Daily Telegraph – February 8, 2010
Thanks to IVF, infertile men are begetting infertile sons
By Melanie McDonagh

A few years back, in a book called Everything Conceivable, on the subject – you’ve guessed it – of infertility treatment, the author, US journalist Liza Mundy, said the unsayable about IVF. If a man isn’t able to have children, she suggested, perhaps he ought not to be having them. An inability to father children may be an excellent way of stopping men with dodgy genes from passing them on. Or, as she put it, “Genetic infertility is nature’s way of making sure the same mistake does not happen twice. Genetic infertility is nature’s levee, if you will, holding back a flood of chromosomal mishaps.”

Well, we normally give nature short shrift over here, particularly when it comes to the subject of people being able to have children, pretty well regardless of where they’re at – in their 60s, gay-and-lesbian, single, you name it. But whether we’re creating problems in the future hasn’t featured much in discussions about infertility.

Now there is a new Anglo-German study from London’s Institute of Child Health, which bears out the concerns of other experts about the wisdom of a technique for circumventing male fertility problems, called ICSI (Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection), which involves injecting sperm directly into an egg. That includes sperm that would be also-rans in a normal conception.

Read the complete article here.

Public date: February 8th, 2010
Categories: News
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