“The chances of you using your own eggs are very slim,” Carli , of Long Beach, Calif. remembers her doctor explaining. Carli and her husband had already tried for a year on their own to get pregnant.
Women who donate eggs aren't harming their chances of later becoming pregnant, a new study from Belgium finds. Out of a group of 60 women who had donated eggs, 54 later became pregnant within a year ...
A 31-year-old woman from Kansas City, Missouri, has become the first woman in Kansas or the Kansas City area to have her eggs frozen in a rare procedure, then later have the eggs thawed and fertilized ...
Fertility coverage, aka “egg freezing,” has been hailed as the latest breakthrough benefit for women to break through Wall Street’s very thick glass ceiling. With egg freezing, mommy leave can be ...
Fertility clinics report more procedures with donor eggs Many more women still use their own eggs for IVF Side effect data for donors is lacking%2C researchers say More U.S. women are attempting to ...
Q: I'm almost 35 years old and I don’t have a prospective father in sight. Can I freeze my eggs and use them later? A: I know your biological clock is ticking and you have heard the stories and seen ...
Although women over age 50 who become pregnant via egg donation are at an elevated risk for developing obstetrical complications, their complication rates are similar to those of younger recipients, ...
Attorney Danielle Davidian's hopes of bearing a child began to fade as she neared 40 -- a dream deferred by career and love's hits and misses. Three years ago, Davidian, now 43, turned to Dr. Mark ...
Former tennis player Sania Mirza recently revealed that she reached out to Farah Khan, a close friend, when she decided to freeze her eggs. “I wanted to freeze my eggs. And I reached out to you and ...
A stunning discovery based on epigenetics (the inheritance of propensities acquired in the womb) reveals that consuming choline—a nutrient found in eggs and other foods—during pregnancy may ...