Over seven months in the fall of 2012 and the spring of 2013, nine women who had been born without wombs received uterine transplants from living donors; mostly, their mothers. The transplants took ...
Low oxygen conditions while culturing rGOCs (reconstructed granulosa cell-oocyte complexes) increased oocyte diameters in vitro, and viable eggs were successfully produced using this method. Mature ...
Dr. Francesca Duncan's pioneering work at the Buck Institute reveals why reproductive aging matters for business and society In the fast-evolving landscape of longevity science, one researcher has ...
Many studies have found that fertility issues are on the rise on an international level. For decades, the American Dream has been that of a family with a suburban home and a white picket fence.
HOUSTON, TX, October 23, 2025 (EZ Newswire) -- Inception Fertility, opens new tab™ (Inception), the largest provider of comprehensive fertility products and services in North America, announces today ...
Wild animals that have acquired adaptions to maximize their reproductive output in some of the world's most extreme conditions may provide answers to some of the most pressing problems in the field of ...
US researchers have reached a remarkable milestone in reproductive science, successfully generating early-stage human embryos using adult skin cells. By combining advanced DNA manipulation with ...
For the past several decades, fertility rates have been in decline. In 1950, the global total fertility rate was around 4.8, meaning that the average woman could expect to have 4–⁠5 children during ...
This activity was supported by grants between the National Academy of Sciences and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, Burroughs Wellcome Fund (grant 1022869), Howard and Georgeanna Jones ...
Editor's note: All opinions, columns and letters reflect the views of the individual writer and not necessarily those of the IDS or its staffers. Shocked? Well, we shouldn’t be. A 2012 study in Nature ...
Scientists have uncovered the genetic underpinnings of one of the ocean's most bizarre animals: a branching marine worm named Ramisyllis kingghidorahi that lives inside sea sponges and reproduces in a ...