Defect risk higher for assisted fertility babies

(Reuters) – Babies born to couples who had fertility treatment have a greater risk of birth abnormalities and doctors should be prepared to warn potential parents about these risks, French scientists said on Sunday.

Health

Clinical geneticist Geraldine Viot said couples considering undergoing assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatment should be told that the risk of birth defects is around twice that of babies conceived naturally.

ART includes various methods including in vitro fertilization (IVF) and a technique known as ICSI, in which a sperm is injected directly into an egg in a laboratory.

“We found a major congenital malformation in 4.24 percent of the (ART) children,” said Viot, of the Maternity Port Royal hospital in Paris, whose findings were presented to a conference of the European Society of Human Genetics in Stockholm.

She said this was around double the rate seen in the general population, but added that she thought most doctors working in fertility clinics in France only told couples about such risks if they were asked specific questions.

“Given that our study is the largest to date, we think that our data are …likely to be statistically representative of the true picture,” Viot said in a commentary on her research.

A study published in 2009 found that the number of babies born worldwide through ART rose to 246,000 annually in 2002 from 219,000 in 2000.

Viot’s team conducted a survey of 33 French fertility clinics and studied data from all ART births from these clinics from 2003 to 2007 — giving a total of 15,162 children.

Questionnaires were completed both by the parents and the pediatrician, and the prevalence of birth abnormalities was compared with data from national registers.

The average age of the parents of babies with abnormalities was not statistically different from the other parents who had had fertility treatment.

Viot said the higher rate was in part due to more heart problems in ART babies, and also due to more abnormalities of the urinary and reproductive systems, particularly in boys.

Among minor defects, the scientists found a five times higher rate of angioma — benign tumors made up of small blood vessels on or near the surface of the skin. These occurred more than twice as frequently in girls than in boys.

Viot said that in France, some 200,000 children have been born after ART so far. This meant a birth abnormality rate of this size should be seen as “a public health issue.”

“It is important that all doctors and also politicians are informed about this,” she said.

“We also need to follow up all children born after ART and to put much more effort into trying to understand which of the procedures involved is implicated in this problem.”

(Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Celine Dion pregnant with twins, says husband

(Reuters) – After a failed pregnancy last year, Celine Dion’s wish to have another child looks set to come true with the Canadian singer and her husband announcing that she is pregnant — and expecting twins.

Entertainment | People

Dion’s husband and manager Rene Angelil told People magazine that Dion, 42, is 14 weeks’ pregnant after undergoing six attempts at in vitro fertilization. He said they plan to find out the sex of the babies next month.

“We’re ecstatic. Celine is just hoping for a healthy pregnancy. She was hoping for one baby and the news that we are having two is a double blessing,” Angelil, 68, told People.

Dion and Angelil have a nine-year-old son, Rene Charles, who was also conceived through in vitro fertilization.

Dion, a five-time Grammy Award winner, is among the top-selling singers of all time, having sold more than 200 million albums around the world. Her hits include the “Titanic” theme “My Heart Will Go On” and “If You Asked Me To.”

(Writing by Belinda Goldsmith, Editing by Dean Goodman)

PETA pays octomom Nadya Suleman $5K to promote pet family planning

London, May 20 (ANI): PETA is paying octomom Nadya Suleman 5,000 dollars to put a 3-foot-by-4-foot plastic sign on her front door that reads— “Don”t Let Your Dog or Cat Become an Octomom. Always Spay or Neuter.”

The sign will adorn Suleman’s door until June 9, the deadline when city officials say it must be removed.

The organisation is also throwing in a month”s supply of veggie hot dogs and burgers for her and her 14 children.

Suleman, 34, acknowledged she put the sign on her door partly for the money but added that her support of PETA is genuine.

“I love animals and I do believe they should be spayed or neutered. Humans of course are much different,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

Suleman said that her children, the oldest of whom is nine, want a dog and she has told they can have one when they are old enough to care for it.

Suleman already had six children when she gave birth 16 months ago to octuplets conceived by in vitro fertilization.

And since then she has been trying hard to pay her bills and was in danger of losing her home earlier this year.

Her lawyer has since negotiated an extension on a 450,000 dollars mortgage payment that had been due in March.

“It”s really a win-win situation for everyone,” PETA campaign coordinator Amanda Fortino said of the sign.

Fortino said the agreement allowed PETA to do its part to help Suleman financially and at the same time they could spread the word that more than 7 million cats and dogs enter shelters every year, where more than half are put to death. (ANI)

Halle Berry pregnant with second child?

London, September 2 (ANI): Halle Berry is reportedly expecting her second child and is three months pregnant.

The Oscar winning actress, who gave birth to little Nahla last year, was said to be looking forward to welcoming her second baby with boyfriend Gabriel Aubry.

“Halle is overjoyed,” the Daily Express quoted a source as telling America’s Life and Style magazine.

“The first time, she struggled so much to get pregnant and eventually conceived through in vitro fertilization. This time, the baby was conceived through artificial insemination.

“She’s just ecstatic to be pregnant again. She wasn’t sure if she’d have another baby, so she’s very happy,” the source added.

The star’s publicist did not comment on the story. (ANI)

Octomom calls having eight babies a ‘mistake’

London, August 30 (ANI): Nadya Suleman, the mother of the world’s longest-surviving octuplets, has called giving birth to eight babies a “mistake”.

The single, unemployed mother, who added to her previous lot of six kids after undergoing in-vitro fertilization, confessed becoming a history-making mum earlier this year was a blunder.

“I think having eight was a mistake in terms of the well-being of all the kids,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

The 33-year-old also alleged that she was living like a recluse in her suburban Los Angeles family home and that she and her family were being treated like “freaks”.

She said: “Every time we go out we are mobbed by gawpers and bullies. We get crazy reactions, from mild ones like neighbours snickering to dangerous ones.

“I’ve had very nasty threats and my car has been vandalised.” (ANI)

California hospital where Octomom gave birth faces 250K dollar fine for file leak

New York, May 16 (ANI): The southern California hospital that played host to Nadya Suleman while she delivered her eight babies earlier this year has been slapped with a 250,000-dollar fine for failing to keep her medical records away from nosy employees.

Kaiser Permanente sacked 15 workers and disciplined eight more in March for prying into the file of the mother of octuplets.

The hospital in Bellflower was said to have self-reported the violations to the state and landed the fine.

“Californians should never have to worry that their private medical information will be improperly shared,” the New York Daily News quoted Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger as saying.

“This fine should be a reminder that there are consequences for violations of medical privacy,” he added.

Nadya, the 33-year-old single, unemployed mum, had come under fire for delivering the eight babies, through in-vitro fertilization, after already having 6 previous kids, ages 2 to 7. (ANI)

Octomom says she doesn’t need a tummy tuck

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Mother of octuplets Nadya Suleman has said she would never accept a tummy tuck even if it were offered as a freebie because she does not need it.

The single, unemployed mum-of-14, who used in-vitro fertilization to conceive the eight babies and her previous six kids, ages 2 to 7, said she would let nature take its course on her body.

“I would never even accept a tummy tuck even if it were offered because I don’t need it,” Us magazine quoted her as telling RadarOnline.com.

“I’m actually shocked myself at my own body. My goal is to do things as naturally as possible,” she added.

The history-making mum said though she has had “absolutely no time to do anything yet,” she would find her own way getting back to shape.

She said: “I would like to join a gym. My friends have nicknamed me ‘Rubberband’ because after every singleton I had, within a month, I was back to a size 2. After the twins, it took me two months. Now, it’s been three months, and I’m not a 2 yet. I’m only a 5 or 6, but I’ll get there.” (ANI)

Octomom faces lawsuit for exploiting her kids

New York, May 5 (ANI): Nadya Suleman, the mother of octuplets, has been slapped with a lawsuit for exploiting her eight babies.

Celebrity lawyer Gloria Allred filed a petition in Orange County, California, alleging the history-making mum was taking advantage of the newborns and raking in money without proper consideration of their interests.

Allred argued the babies should have a court-appointed guardian and a separate theatrical agent to ensure they receive their share of any money earned by their fame.

“Rather than choosing to provide her children with a normal life,” The New York Daily News quoted Allred as saying.

“Nadya Suleman, has chosen instead to commercially exploit them, and it appears she plans to continue commercial exploitation of them in the future as well.

“Since she has chosen this path, we believe that the babies are entitled to remuneration,” Allred added.

Allred, who sued the 33-year-old on behalf of former child actor and child labor advocate Paul Petersen, further said that media filming the infants with paid contracts could violate child labor laws.

Peter Scheer, a lawyer and executive director of the California First Amendment Coalition, nodded to the possibility.

Scheer explained: “If a media organization has bought and paid for special access to these children in a way that legitimately can be construed as compensation to them for their services, then it may be that labor laws come into play.”

It was previously revealed that Nadya, the single, unemployed mum-of-14, was living at home with her parents and used in-vitro fertilization to conceive the octuplets and her previous six kids, ages 2 to 7.

The case will be heard on June 22. (ANI)

‘Copycat’ octomom gets Jolie-like tattoo

New York, April 28 (ANI): The mother of octuplets Nadya Suleman has got herself a new tattoo resembling that of actress Angelina Jolie.

The history-making mum, who gave birth to eight babies in January, adding to her previous lot of six, already has seven tattoos, a passion that she “shares” with the Hollywood star.

According to RadarOnline.com, the single, unemployed mum went under the needle to get a tattoo of an angel with 14 stars, representing her brood, reports the New York Daily News.

Interestingly, Jolie has a tattoo reminding her of her 6 kids with the geographical coordinates of their birthplaces.

The 33-year-old, who uses the services of a non-profit agency to raise her lot, has previously been in the news for allegedly making efforts to ape the actress, including going under the knife for pouty Jolie-like lips.

Suleman was further claimed to have been inspired by Jolie for having a big family with huge number of kids.

A report in the InTouch Weekly revealed that the mum-of-14, who conceived all her babies through in vitro fertilization, “used to moonlight as a stripper under the name ‘Angelina’”.

And though Suleman has denied allegations of trying to copy Jolie with her looks and actions, her recent tattoo has provided enough room for the speculation to return. (ANI)

Palin’s campaign adviser now wants to make babies

New York, Apr 19 (ANI): Nicolle Wallace, the campaign adviser of Sarah Palin, is through with politics.

Wallace, who was blamed for Palin’s notorious 150,000-dollar clothes-shopping spree, told Marie Claire: “My professional life will never involve working on a campaign again.”

Instead, the 37-year-old said she’s pursuing her “life’s ambition” with her Republican lawyer hubby, Mark Wallace, of starting a family – with the help of in vitro fertilization treatments, reports The New York Post.

Wallace is also busy penning a novel about three women at the top of their careers, including the first woman president. (ANI)

Octuplets’ mom wants to trademark ‘Octomom’ nickname

Washington, April 16 (ANI): Nadya Suleman, who became a history-making mum after giving birth to octuplets on January 26, is seeking to trademark the word “Octomom”.

The 33-year-old, who conceived her 14 kids through in vitro fertilization, has filed an application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to obtain legal rights to the name.

But a Houston-based novelty company was said to have already made a similar request.

“It’s not going to matter because they had no permission from Nadya, who has the rightful claim to the name ‘Octomom’, ” People quoted Suleman’s attorney Jeff Czech as saying.

The single, unemployed mum-of-14 had previously been out of favour for the word, but made the decision to apply for its legitimate claim after realising the capitalist opportunities associated with it.

Czech added: “She’s never warmed to it, but the idea would be for others to use it for licensing. It’s just a smart thing to do.” (ANI)

US octo-mother has TV reality show deal on horizon

Lost Angeles – Nadya Suleman, the US single mother of 14 children including recently-born octuplets, has four production companies bidding to create a TV reality show out of her day-to-day chaos, “Us” magazine reported Saturday. Jeff Czech, Suleman’s lawyer, told Us that Nadya was “interested in, and hoping to find, something not so intrusive to the family and babies while, at the same time, (something to) sort of focus on trying to make a little income for herself.”

She has been criticized for accepting public assistance, which is “heavy on her mind,” Czech said.

Suleman picked up the seventh of the babies from hospital earlier this month. The octuplets were born in January.

Suleman receives free government-funded medical care because she has no health insurance, and welfare to help feed the children. But her choice to pursue large multiple births as a single mother with no income has drawn public ire over her expectation that she will receive financial support from government and private sources.

She solicits donations through her website.

Suleman, 33, had come in for widespread criticism for conceiving the octuplets through in vitro fertilization, even though she already had six kids under the age of eight, was living at her mother’s house and had no visible means of support.

However she bought a new house earlier this month using money she received from donations as a downpayment, while a charity arranged for the babies’ care. But with the cost of care estimated at 45,000 dollars a month, it’s unclear how long the charity will be able to pick up the tab. (dpa)

Spanish woman first to bear twins after ovarian tissue transplant

Valencia, Spain – A 39-year-old Spanish former breast cancer patient will become the world’s first woman to give birth to twins after receiving a transplant of her own ovarian tissue, officials said Tuesday in the eastern city of Valencia.

Women who are treated with chemotherapy or radiotherapy often experience precocious ovarian failure, health official Manuel Cervera explained.

The Valencian woman, however, had ovarian tissue extracted before her cancer treatment and retransplanted after it, restoring her hormonal functioning.

The woman underwent in vitro fertilization, and is in her 15th week of pregnancy.

“This pregnancy opens the real possibility for cancer patients to become mothers,” Cervera said.

The woman was treated by Doctor Peset Hospital and the Valencian Institute of Infertility. (dpa)

Novel method of assessing women’s eggs may boost IVF success

Washington, Mar 24 (ANI): In a major advance towards successful in-vitro fertilization (IVF), scientists have developed a new method to assess the quality of women’s eggs and determine which are more likely to result in pregnancies.

Barry Behr, PhD, HCLD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Stanford University School of Medicine and director of Stanford’s IVF laboratory, described a way to “profile” the eggs to know their chances of success.

Metabolomic testing reveals trace molecules remaining after an array of cellular processes.

Previous studies have shown that metabolomic profiling can be used to identify unique biomarkers left behind by embryos in culture, which foretell the embryos with the highest reproductive potential in IVF.

“Think of it as a sort of smog test for the embryo. It tells you how clean the engine is burning, and whether there are any problems,” said Behr.

For the study, the researchers, first extracted eggs from 43 women, then incubated them in culture for three hours and finally examined their metabolomic results before fertilization.

Then, the researchers documented what happened to each egg-whether it was fertilized, the quality of the resulting embryo on days three and five, and whether it led to a successful pregnancy.

The researchers established a correlation between the number of particular trace elements left behind by the eggs and both embryo viability and pregnancy rates.

“This shows we can predict embryo development and viability from the egg,” said Behr.

Behr further said that the test could someday be used to predict the success of IVF and help determine which eggs should be selected for fertilization or to be frozen.

Using only the best-quality eggs would lead to the creation of fewer embryos and eliminate the need to keep large quantities of embryos in storage.

This could also help doctors avoid the practice of implanting numerous embryos into a woman, which sometimes leads to the birth of twins, triplets and higher-order multiples.

The study appeared in a recent issue of Reproductive Biomedicine Online. (ANI)

Octomum ‘using denial’ to deal with life

Washington, March 21 (ANI): Nadya Suleman, who became a history-making mum after giving birth to octuplets on January 26, has confessed that she uses denial as her defence to deal with life.

The 33-year-old, who conceived all her kids through in vitro fertilization, faced much heat after delivering eight babies, adding to her previous lot of six.

The single, unemployed mum said denial was her way of bracing the reality.

“I’m using denial…it’s a defense mechanism,” Us Weekly quoted her as saying in her daily video blog on RadarOnline.com.

“I keep telling my head and rationalizing over and over that next week that [interest in my life] is going to die down,” she added.

But Nadya, who has agreed to use the services of a non-profit agency to raise her brood of 14 after moving into a new house, was committed to her family.

She added: “It’s going to take a long time to prove not only to myself but to the world I can be a very good mother and I can take care of these children.

“I’m obsessed with their health, safety and well-being.” (ANI)

Two of octuplet babies come home amid mayhem

Los Angeles – Two of the octuplets born in January to single mother Nadya Suleman were enjoying their first day at home Wednesday, hours after a raucous reception from paparazzi might have made the hospital seem calm.

The photographers and other onlookers clung to Suleman’s vehicle as it drove up to the suburban Los Angeles home through a throng of hundreds awaiting the arrival of the celebrity babies and their controversial mother.

“I was really, really worried about their safety,” Suleman told Radar Online. Photographers “were swerving and just getting out of their cars at every stoplight, and knocking on the windshields with their cameras. It didn’t make sense to me.”

But once inside the new house, the atmosphere was quiet and peaceful as a charity-funded staff of nurses had everything prepared.

“The nurses had everything ready,” said Gloria Allred, attorney to the nonprofit neonatal care group Angels in Waiting, which is providing critical care to the octuplets as they gradually make their way to their new home.

“Everything was ready when Nadya came in and they were able to feed the babies and rock the babies and really love the babies,” Allred said on the Today show Wednesday.

Suleman, 33, had come in for widespread criticism for conceiving the octuplets through in vitro fertilization, even though she already had six kids under the age of eight, was living at her mother’s house and had no visible means of support.

However she bought a new house earlier this month using money she received from donations as a downpayment, while the charity arranged for the babies’ care. But with the cost of care estimated at 45,000 dollars a month, it’s unclear how long the charity will be able to pick up the tab.

“We’re hoping that everybody will donate and help to make sure that these little babies, these little innocent ones, get the kind of supportive care that they need, because the consequences of the rest of their lives are going to be decided right now,” Allred said. (dpa)

Octomum accepts round-the-clock help from nonprofit agency to raise her kids

New York, March 10 (ANI): Nadya Suleman, who became a history-making mum after giving birth to octuplets on January 26, has agreed to use the services of a non-profit agency to raise her 14 kids.

The 33-year-old, who conceived all her kids through in vitro fertilization, will have Angels in Waiting assisting her round-the-clock with free neonatal intensive care.

The single, unemployed mum was said to have previously declined the group’s original offer of reported 135,000 dollars a month after refusing to give her consent for a reality show.

However, attorney Gloria Allred and TV’s Dr. Phil McGraw were alleged to have convinced her to reverse her decision and take the revised deal, which now included buying a new house, according to TMZ.com.

“Now that Ms. Suleman has found a suitable new home, Angels in Waiting has also agreed to help Nadya prepare the house properly to meet the children’s needs,” The New York Daily News quoted Allred as saying in a statement.

Dr. McGraw added: “Nadya realized that she had to make every effort to care for the octuplets as well as the six children at home in a way that proved that she understood the enormity and complexity of the task ahead.

“The childcare will be completely transparent, so that Kaiser Permanente and Child Protective Services will see that Nadya is seriously committed to her family.” (ANI)

Video of Octomom giving birth ‘up for grabs’ for a million

New York, Mar 5 (ANI): A tape showing Nadya Suleman giving birth to her eight kids in a California hospital is available for upward of 1 million dollars, according to celebrity Web site.

TMZ.com reports that the videotape was made with the mother’s consent, although it’s unclear who was running the camera.

The site quoted multiple sources as saying the tape was being shopped, reports The New York Daily News.

Suleman delivered the octuplets on January 23 after undergoing in vitro fertilization.

Although the 33-year-old, who is also known as ‘Octomom’, has yet to reveal the identity of the sperm donor dad, she – in a blog for RadarOnline.com – said that all her eight kids will eventually learn his identity.

Suleman said she speaks with the dad about once a year.

“He’s a good platonic friend. He knows well that I will protect him, his identity forever. Whether or not he knows (the kids) in the future, I don’t know. This all has to go away first … it’s his choice,” she said. (ANI)

Now, a technique to pick healthiest sperm for improved IVF treatment

Washington, Feb 26 (ANI): In a bid to revolutionise in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment, Brit scientists have developed a new technology, called Raman spectroscopy, to find sperm with healthy, intact DNA for better chances of a healthy embryo.

Usually, infertile men with low sperm count or abnormal sperms opt for IVF, in which scientists use light microscopes to find any sperm cell, and then inject it directly into an egg to fertilize it.

But the biggest shortcoming with this method is that broken sperm often means broken DNA.

And Alistair Elfick, a professor at the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom, who developed the technique using Raman spectroscopy, said that the DNA, and not the sperm cell itself, is what is really important for a developing embryo.

“It’s interesting research because is shows that there are finer distinctions for sperm other than dead or alive,” Discovery News quoted Michael Morris, a Raman spectroscopy expert at the University of Michigan who was not involved in the research, as saying.A sperm cell is pretty stripped down. The DNA has no explicit role in delivering itself, it’s just the payload,” said Elfick.

While a light microscope kicks a sperm cell’s metaphorical tires, Raman spectroscopy pops the trunk to directly examine the DNA payload.

In Raman spectroscopy, the scientists shine a beam of light on the 23 chromosomes enclosed in the head of the sperm.

As damaged DNA refracts light differently than intact DNA, the researchers can examine the resulting light to determine which DNA is the most likely to lead to a healthy human embryo.

However, when it comes to put the theory into practice, it’s another picture altogether.

To date, scientists haven’t injected Raman spectroscopy-certified sperm into eggs and examined how many more embryos are created or how healthy they are.

There are many limitations to the technique as Raman spectroscopy can only examine tens to hundreds of sperm cells at a time, which may not be a big problem for many infertile men, as this is also roughly the number of sperm they can produce during an ejaculation.

While some scientists fear injecting Raman-examined sperm into an egg, Alistair and Morris are confident that the energy contained in the laser beam is too small to cause any permanent damage to the sperm cell.

But according to Max Diem, a professor at Northwestern University who uses Raman spectroscopy to examine human egg cells, useful reading will require potentially harmful amounts of laser energy.

“This is not just around the corner for couples,” said Diem.

He stressed that more testing is necessary before any Raman spectroscopy examined sperm and egg union is placed into a human uterus. (ANI)

Now, a technique to pick healthiest sperm for improved IVF treatment

Washington, Feb 26 (ANI): In a bid to revolutionise in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment, Brit scientists have developed a new technology, called Raman spectroscopy, to find sperm with healthy, intact DNA for better chances of a healthy embryo.

Usually, infertile men with low sperm count or abnormal sperms opt for IVF, in which scientists use light microscopes to find any sperm cell, and then inject it directly into an egg to fertilize it.

But the biggest shortcoming with this method is that broken sperm often means broken DNA.

And Alistair Elfick, a professor at the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom, who developed the technique using Raman spectroscopy, said that the DNA, and not the sperm cell itself, is what is really important for a developing embryo.

“It’s interesting research because is shows that there are finer distinctions for sperm other than dead or alive,” Discovery News quoted Michael Morris, a Raman spectroscopy expert at the University of Michigan who was not involved in the research, as saying.A sperm cell is pretty stripped down. The DNA has no explicit role in delivering itself, it’s just the payload,” said Elfick.

While a light microscope kicks a sperm cell’s metaphorical tires, Raman spectroscopy pops the trunk to directly examine the DNA payload.

In Raman spectroscopy, the scientists shine a beam of light on the 23 chromosomes enclosed in the head of the sperm.

As damaged DNA refracts light differently than intact DNA, the researchers can examine the resulting light to determine which DNA is the most likely to lead to a healthy human embryo.

However, when it comes to put the theory into practice, it’s another picture altogether.

To date, scientists haven’t injected Raman spectroscopy-certified sperm into eggs and examined how many more embryos are created or how healthy they are.

There are many limitations to the technique as Raman spectroscopy can only examine tens to hundreds of sperm cells at a time, which may not be a big problem for many infertile men, as this is also roughly the number of sperm they can produce during an ejaculation.

While some scientists fear injecting Raman-examined sperm into an egg, Alistair and Morris are confident that the energy contained in the laser beam is too small to cause any permanent damage to the sperm cell.

But according to Max Diem, a professor at Northwestern University who uses Raman spectroscopy to examine human egg cells, useful reading will require potentially harmful amounts of laser energy.

“This is not just around the corner for couples,” said Diem.

He stressed that more testing is necessary before any Raman spectroscopy examined sperm and egg union is placed into a human uterus. (ANI)