Guest guest Posted June 5, 2004 Report Share Posted June 5, 2004 http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid =1086419107051 Healthy babies for disease carriers A Jerusalem woman suffering from myotonic dystrophy is due to give birth in December to a healthy baby identified as a normal ovum and two-day-old embryo by a unique but complicated polar body pre-gestational diagnosis (PGD) that weeded out those with the disease... Myotonic dystrophy, which occurs in one in 10,000 infants, statistically could be handed down to half of her offspring. She herself suffers from a mild form of the disease, which can cause serious muscle weakness, mental retardation, hair loss, and cataracts in the most severe cases. Although known genetic diseases in newly created embryos can be identified by removing one cell from an eight-cell blastomere mechanically or by using lasers, the error rate can be relatively high and damage could be done to the embryo. But testing polar bodies, which are microscopic and unnecessary cells on the unfertilized and fertilized egg that will in any case degenerate, has been found to be much more accurate. It can mean not having a baby with Tay-Sachs disease, who will inevitably die after great suffering and not aborting; instead, one can have a completely healthy child. ... Women with fertility and genetic problems who are longing to have a baby undergo tremendous emotional stress. And if they finally manage to produce a healthy embryo that is implanted and give birth to what is supposedly a healthy baby but turns out to have the disease, they suffer an emotional blow beyond description, " ... The technique can be used to detect any genetic mutation, either a disease caused by one molecularly analyzable gene or several, " said Dr. Ephrat Levy-Lahad, head of the medical genetics unit. Among these are Tay-Sachs and familial dysautonomia, which occur mostly in Jews, as well as thalassemia, myotonic dystrophy, neurofibromatosis, fragile X, hemophilia, and Marfan's syndrome, which affect every population. " We are prepared to set up our lab for any genetic disease people come with, caused not only by dominant genes with a 50% chance of each embryo being affected but also recessive genes, with one in four having the disease and two being carriers. " We select healthy eggs in a very labor-intensive procedure, then fertilize it with the husband's sperm to produce embryos, and then perform a second polar-body examination to make sure that the blastomere is healthy. We believe that polar-body biopsy is the best, because you don't know the long-term effects of removing a cell from the embryo, and the less manipulation, the better. Most labs that do ordinary PGD use lasers for a biopsy, but we use only mechanical means, because we worry about any damage the heat could cause, " ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.