HONOLULU — The risk for placenta accreta is 3 times higher in pregnancies achieved with in vitro fertilization using frozen embryo transfer than in those using fresh embryos, according to a new study.
More women are choosing to freeze their eggs, but fewer are returning to use them, according to a study published online Aug. 29 in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. Mabel B. Lee, M.D., ...
Technological advancements and expanding insurance coverage are fueling significant growth. The fertility services market is ...
Avoiding a multiple pregnancy during IVF seems easy: Just transfer a single embryo. Single-embryo transfer is associated with a lower pregnancy rate as well as a much reduced multiple pregnancy rate.
Welcome to the world, baby Thaddeus! An Ohio couple says that they have welcomed a baby boy who was born from an embryo that was frozen over 30 years ago. Lindsey Pierce, 35, and her husband Tim ...
ST. LOUIS — Samantha was an embryo frozen in time for approximately a decade before a middle-aged single mother said yes to her birth. That mother was Dawn Jones-Goldstein, a 46-year-old Eureka woman ...