Category Archives: Embryology

Alumni Spotlight- Procopio brothers and the biology of college life – Knight Crier

Submitted Photo

Kyle and Dylan Propcopio, Class of 2020 NPHS grads

The electric buzz backstage before a performance is a feeling known very well to both Dylan and Kyle Procopio.

The dynamic duo reminisce on their time at North Penn with smiles. While at the high school, they were assistants to the Stage Manager in all NPHS theatre productions, cabinet participants in Thespian Troupe, and members of SGS (Stimulation Gaming Society) and National Honors Society. Additionally, they were tremendously involved in Boyscout Troop 51.

Currently studying at Millersville University, the Procopios are both majoring in biology. Kyle, with a concentration in molecular genetics, and Dylan with a double major in secondary education.

Did you have a favorite class you attended while at NP?

Kyle- Definitely Genetics and Embryology with Mr. Christopher! Both Dylan and I enjoyed the curriculum and his teaching style.

Do you plan on being involved in theatre in some aspect during college?

Dylan- Yes! I had a wonderful experience during my involvement with NPHS theatre. I plan on participating in stage crew here at Millersville in any capacity. But, everything is on hold until the pandemic settles down.

What was the transition like from NPHS to Millersville?

Kyle- I was a little nervous about going to Millersville since the coronavirus is still happening. But even with some serious precautions, the transition was pretty smooth. We both found a strong group of friends. And even though the school is a little bigger, it definitely feels like home.

What inspired you to go into biology education?

Dylan- I always loved biology! During boy scouts, I was in charge of instructing some of the newer guys in our troop. I taught them certain nature skills and survival tactics, and I really found it rewarding.

What words of wisdom would you like to give current students at North Penn?

Kyle- Make the most of your time at North Penn! Of course, remember time management is important, but dont forget to make time with friends and activities youre interested in. Those are the memories that will last you a lifetime.

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Alumni Spotlight- Procopio brothers and the biology of college life - Knight Crier

Ive got 150 kids by having sex as a sperm donor, my last customer had her partner wait at the bedroom door – The Sun

HEADING to a house in west London two nights ago, 49-year-old Joe Donor banged on the door - knowing what was going to happen.

Opening it to Joe was a lesbian couple hed never met before.

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Their only wish was to have a baby together - and Joe, who they had tracked down on his personal Facebook page advertising his sperm donor services, was their best bet.

So, he took one of the women upstairs and, despite never having met before (and her partner being mere metres away), they had full sex on the bed.

He then left with his trademark comment: Good luck and I hope you have good news in two weeks.

It was PI, he told Fabulous.

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By that he means partial intercourse - sex without kissing or cuddling.

He also has NI, natural intercourse, and AI, artificial intercourse.

Natural intercourse is really full sex, like you might have on a first date, Joe said. So no bedroom gymnastics, but kissing and cuddling. Artificial intercourse is when you use a turkey baster.

He added a lot of people wanted to be inseminated the old-fashioned way - but he only has STI checks once a year (although more frequently if asked).

And he admitted he doesnt do background checks on the people he is potentially impregnating, adding: I think having a baby makes people more mature. I dont do any checks on them though.

Asked when he last had sex (two nights ago), he was surprisingly coy about how many people he had made love to.

Its more than the average person but there are people who have more. Theres some sultans out there who have more.

Its fewer than 200, he laughed. Im not a rockstar and Im very respectful.

Single Joe, who uses a pseudonym, revealed he had 150 kids worldwide and had impregnated a further five women during lockdown.

Its more than the average person but there are people who have more. Theres some sultans out there who have more, he said.

His name is on a few, not many birth certificates and he wouldnt mind if the children called him daddy but he doesnt really see many of them often. They have my DNA, of course, he said. But I leave it up to the mothers. If they want to send me pictures, great. If they block me as soon as Ive done the deed, thats okay too.

Joe, who anonymously donates his sperm by concealing his real name, said he wasnt paid for his actions but did it to help.

He set up his business 12 years ago after realising he wanted to benefit people - but shockingly his parents dont know although are aware I have a few kids.

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He denied it was about ego, explaining: "I have about 150 kids worldwide but there's currently five women pregnant with my children and one already born.

I enjoy seeing more of my children running around.

I dont think there is an inordinate amount of ego associated with it.

Some of them call me daddy, some dont.

Ive met about 50 of them, Ive seen some of them when they were born, but not since.

He wasnt slowed down by the pandemic, despite being stuck in Argentina - instead opting to sow his seed there.

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"I feel busier than ever, he said. "I love seeing photos of the babies when they're born as a lot of them do look like me.

"I don't financially gain from providing my sperm to women, I just enjoy helping people.

"Luckily I run a few online businesses so I'm always available and can provide sperm whenever they're ovulating.

"I had travelled to Argentina to provide sperm to a few women who had contacted me online but I ended up getting stuck there until international flights resumed a few weeks ago.

"I'm now in the UK for a few weeks and hope to help as many people as possible fall pregnant."

Unfortunately, the nature of his work has meant he hasnt managed to maintain his own long-term relationship with his last ending in November last year.

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That was with a woman in her 20s when I was living in Australia, he explained. We were going out for about six months but its ended. When we were in the relationship I didnt have sex with other women, but it was difficult.

He admitted sometimes his impregnation sessions could lead into longer relationships, but they almost always ended when people wanted something more stable.

I dont have a girlfriend in the typical sense, he said. But I do develop friendships and sometimes romantic relationships with the women I impregnate, he added.

With five women currently pregnant with Joe unborn children and one woman already giving birth this summer, Joe is on target to impregnate 10 women this year.

However, it is not all plain-sailing with some women lying to their men about meeting Joe, he said.

Hes been caught out trying to impregnate women behind their partners back.

I think having a baby makes people more mature. I dont do any checks on them though.

He denies any wrongdoing in relation to this.

I dont pry into peoples personal matters, he said. Im not the one cheating or lying in the relationship. Its themHe told of one incident where he went to impregnate a woman only to learn her husband didnt want one.

So basically she had arranged an orgy because she didnt want him to know the truth - that it was just her and me and she was planning to get pregnant, he said.

But when the husband found out the truth he started waving a gun about - and Joe only just managed to escape.

Joe has travelled across America, Argentina, Italy, Singapore, The Philippines and the UK donating his sperm.

He added: "I have babies all over the world and although people always worry over incestual issues but that has never happened.

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"I started donating sperm in 2008 and have fathered on average 10 children per year.

"I have always said I wouldn't father more than 2500 but that would technically be impossible unless I live until the age of 250.

"I aim to donate my sperm for as long as it works which could be until I'm in my 90s."

Talking about safe sex, Joe opts to have yearly medical checks.

He adds: "I have a health check at least annually but if a woman requests more frequent testing, I will have another check on demand.

"There's always a risk as what I'm doing isn't regulated but women have checks during pregnancy too so they'd soon find out if they'd contracted a sexually transmitted disease, which has never happened."

Joe is hoping to head back to his hometown of America after his UK trip but says he's happy to travel anywhere in the world to donate his sperm.

He added: "I'm contacted by women all over the world via Facebook or email.

"I don't mind travelling as I can work wherever I need to in the world.

"I'm hoping that as lockdown eases in some parts of the world again that it'll be easier to travel more frequently."

HOW DOES SPERM DONATION WORK IN THE UK?

In the UK, donation in exchange for payment is prohibited by law.

If you donate your sperm through a fertility clinic or a sperm bank, you wont have any responsibilities or rights towards a child conceived using your semen.

However, as of April 2005, children conceived through sperm donation do have the right to ask for certain information about their donor once they reach the age of 16.

You can find the clinic that is best for you through theHuman Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) licensed clinic.

Every year, around 2,000 children are conceived with the help of a donor.

Donated sperm cannot be used to create more than 10 families, with no limits on the number of children born within each family.

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Meanwhile, meet the 57-year-old sperm donor who believes he could have HUNDREDS of children.

And an entrepreneur opened up about how a DNA test revealed her dad wasnt her father and how she discovered her new family.

We also shared how a woman turned to a White Van sperm donor to have her daughter.

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Ive got 150 kids by having sex as a sperm donor, my last customer had her partner wait at the bedroom door - The Sun

Modern families and assisted reproduction: Part 2 – Family Law

Tom Harrill, St Ives Chambers

Family law sits at the cutting edge of science. As the bounds of medicine and technology are pushed ever further the law must respond.

Part two considers assisted reproduction and the challenges of statutory interpretation under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (as amended) (HFEA), Part 2. Recent decisions of the senior courts provide a good example of how provisions of the HFEA have been read purposively in order to grant a parental without the need to make a declaration of incompatibly where the applicants did not meet one or more of the statutory criteria. It is in this context that there are renewed calls for Parliament to ensure the legislation is fit for purpose.

The full article will be published in the October issue ofFamily Law.

Find out moreorrequest a free 1-week trialofFamily Law journal. Please quote: 100482.

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Modern families and assisted reproduction: Part 2 - Family Law

Why Personally Opposed to Abortion but Pro-Choice Doesn’t Work – Patheos

Many politicians and voters say that while they are personally opposed to abortion, they believe they should not impose their religious opinion on other people and so, as a matter of public policy, they support a womans right to abortion.

This is the position of many Catholics, including Joe Biden. But Catholic ethicists, who have a lot of experience in parsing these issues, say that this rationalization does not hold water. Nor can abortion, which targets a whole class of human beings and perpetrates violence against millions, be outweighed by other important moral considerations that are more narrowly focused and that involve fewer victims.

Again, they are explaining Catholic ethics, but since they are making their case rationally, from natural law, I dont see anything that another Christian or, indeed, a non-Christian would necessarily have problems with. Excerpt, perhaps, with their conclusion. If you believe in abortion despite their arguments, can you make as a good a case for your position that they do for yours? Or, instead of using reason, are you simply asserting your will to power?

Modern embryology has placed beyond doubt the status of the human embryo, from its very formation and earliest developmental stage, as a distinct living member of the speciesHomo sapiens: a human being. This is not a theological claim; it is a statement of scientific fact. What the Church teaches is that every member of the human family irrespective of race, sex, or creed, but also, and equally, irrespective of age, size, stage of development, location, or condition of dependence is the bearer of inherent and equal dignity and, as such, is entitled to legal protection against violent assault.. . .

The Church does not teach, as Biden would have people believe it does, that abortion may legitimately be treated by the law and the state the way they treat, say, the obligation to be grateful to benefactors or the duty to avoid dishonoring parents. For government to permit abortion, the Church teaches, is for governmentitselfto commit an injustice against its victims denying a disfavored class, the unborn, protection it affords to all others. To be responsible, or partially responsible, for the injustice of the law in exposing unborn children to legally authorized lethal violence is to be complicit in grave injustice. . . .

The reason to oppose abortion at all is also the reason to prohibit it. Psychologically, it is possible for one sincerely to wish that no one ever had an abortion while supporting its legality and even its subsidization. But support for those policies necessarily entails willing the denial of basic human rights to one category of human beings: a grave injustice no matter the victim class. And because nearly everyone believes that he himself and those others he considers worth protecting should enjoy these basic rights, support for those policies involves a violation of the Golden Rule.

So, though abortion and slavery differ in many respects, they are alike in not admitting of the option of the personally opposed, but . . . position. The reason to be against slavery its radical denial of the equal dignity of the victim and thus its grave injustice is the reason for prohibiting it. It is precisely the same with abortion.

Next time: Why Balancing Abortion against Other Issues Doesnt Work

Photo: Pro-abortion Catholics by jordanuhl7 / CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) via Wikimedia Commons

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Why Personally Opposed to Abortion but Pro-Choice Doesn't Work - Patheos

The funeral director giving the gift of life – by donating eggs – Nottinghamshire Live

A funeral director has given the gift of life three times - by donating her eggs.

Mum-of-two Leanne Armstrong heard an advert on the radio calling for egg donors in late 2009 as she drove to work and appreciating the importance of life through her dealings with grieving families immediately volunteered.

She had her first treatment six months later and has now donated her eggs on half a dozen occasions in six years.

Leanne, 39, says the children she helped to create can expect a hero's welcome if they ever come to her door.

She said: Id say to them, Yes, come and find me knock on the door.

Im quite curious to know how they look and whether they are well, but Im more intrigued by the recipients. Id love to hear their stories.

Leanne is now classed as too old to donate, as Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) rules limit donors to women aged between 18 and 35 apart from in exceptional circumstance.

Instead, she is waiting in happy anticipation for any of the children produced by her eggs to track her down.

Leanne, whose children, Elise, 16, and Nyle, 11, are from a previous relationship and is now engaged to Dan, 53, says she had no idea egg donation was possible until she heard the radio advert.

For the last two years, she has volunteered as an ambassador, working to raise awareness of the process.

Altrui, part of Apricity, specialises in finding, matching and looking after altruistic egg donors with one-to-one, anonymous donation.

She said: Id never heard of egg donation before listening to the advert, but working in my industry and dealing with death makes you treasure life so much that it really hit home.

I cant imagine wanting to start a family and never being able to.

And now that I cant donate eggs myself anymore, I spend a lot of my time helping other potential donors.

Leanne, of Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, continued: Its one thing reading a fact box about egg donation, its another hearing it from people who have first-hand experience of it.

Within three months of putting her name forward, Leanne had a series of blood tests, her egg count was determined and she had several counselling sessions.

Given the green light to proceed in 2010, it was her daughter, Elise, who helped her inject hormonal treatments for 10 days, to stimulate her egg growth, before having them harvested.

Within two weeks, Leanne received a phone call from the clinic, saying her egg had led to a positive pregnancy test for the recipient but that, sadly, later on, they had miscarried.

She said it just made her want to donate again so six months later, she did exactly that.

Donating her eggs four more times over the next five years, she was elated to find out that three of the four attempts resulted in a successful pregnancy and birth.

As it is illegal in the UK for egg donors to receive anything more than expenses which can be up to 750 it is a purely altruistic act.

Leanne said: I got the cost of childcare covered and the train ticket to the clinic.

Its not about financial gain though, its about helping people who are desperate to start a family to achieve their dream.

All Leanne knows about the children she helped make possible, is that two are boys and one is a girl.

All could be revealed one day, as in April 2005, HFEA rules changed, allowing people conceived through egg donation to find out their donors full name, date of birth, and current address when they turn 18.

Leanne said: I always knew they could track me down one day and thats fine.

Of course, Id be interested in seeing who they are and knowing they are well, but mainly, I feel it is a great honour to have been able to help another woman to start a family.

My main goal is to raise as much awareness about egg donation as possible it really is one of the best things Ive ever done.

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The funeral director giving the gift of life - by donating eggs - Nottinghamshire Live

Your Ultimate Guide To Egg Freezing From The Experts – GLAMOUR UK

Whether you want children in the future, are undecided, or want to preserve your options due to medical reasons, the decision to freeze your eggs has become far more accessible over the last decade or so. Numerous fertility clinics have opened up across the globe, not to mention the technological innovation behind fertility treatments, which has served to promote the process further.

However, theres still a lot of confusion as to what it actually entails, and a lot of debate over the success rates. Here, we speak to some of the experts in the field to clear up everything you need to know about freezing your eggs.

There are many reasons why someone might decide to freeze their eggs, and each decision is extremely personal and unique. One of the most common reasons is that a woman isnt ready to have children or hasn't met the right person, but knows she wants children one day. Another common reason is if a woman is scheduled to receive medical treatments that affect fertility like chemotherapy, and freezing eggs helps to preserve the chance of having children down the line. Others may be inclined to freeze their eggs because they havent decided on whether or not they want children, but want to remove any feeling of time pressure from their decision making process.

The egg freezing process is similar to a cycle of IVF, except the fertilisation and embryo transfer happens at a later date explains Dr Ippokratis Sarris, Director at King's Fertility. Initially a course of daily injections (usually 2 different medications, or sometimes 3) are self-administered by the woman. These aim to stimulate the ovaries to produce a number of growing follicles (fluid-filled sacs within which the eggs reside) and also to control the ovulation so that these eggs can be collected.

The daily injections continue for a couple of weeks, known as the stimulation phase. During this phase, ultrasound scans are performed every few days looking at the ovaries in order to monitor the progress of the growing follicles and occasionally a blood test to check hormone levels, says Dr Sarris. Once the follicles have grown sufficiently, and to a size where it is expected that a mature egg will be retrieved, a final maturation injection is given, followed by the egg collecting procedure two days later.

The collection procedure itself is carried out under anaesthetic (usually sedation, but sometimes local or general anaesthetic is used). Using ultrasound guidance, a needle is passed through the vagina wall, then into the ovaries, and into each of the follicles, explains Dr Sarris. The fluid from within the follicles is drawn out and taken to the laboratory. An embryologist will look at this under a microscope in order to retrieve the eggs. The eggs are then checked for maturity and frozen within a few hours after the procedure.

Theyre frozen using fast-freezing process called vitrification, and stored in specialised cryotanks. The tanks are constantly monitored electronically and maintained, and the eggs can remain there for as long as the patient requires them.

According to the experts, the number of eggs collected can vary from woman to woman. On average, around 10 eggs are collected with any treatment cycle, although this very much depends on a woman's age and her egg reserve, says Dr James Nicopoullos, Medical Director at the Lister Fertility Clinic. Some may be able to produce significantly more on an even cycle and unfortunately some less, with the key being the investigations we do prior to this to help us council the patients as to what to expect and whether it is the right thing for them.

The procedure usually lasts 20-30 minutes, and after 1-2 hours of recovery, the woman can go home, says Dr Sarris. There might be a small amount of spotting from the vagina, and occasionally discomfort over the lower abdomen. However, simple pain relief medication (such as paracetamol or ibuprofen) is usually adequate in controlling it. The woman should be able to return to normal activities by the next day, and the period should arrive within the next 2 weeks. After that, the body should be back to normal and all the effects of the hormones should have passed.

Its possible to have the egg fertilised with sperm before freezing, making it a frozen embryo - however, there are many things to think about before doing so. My recommendation to any single woman would always be to freeze eggs initially for fertility preservation, says Dr Nicopoullos. The key with egg freezing is to give women reproductive choices and should she want to have a family with a future partner, having these eggs frozen will allow them to be thawed and fertilised with his sperm. If however she freezes embryos, i.e. fertilises her eggs with donor sperm before freezing, she won't have this option available to her.

Dr Sarris raises another key consideration; The downside is that the embryo legally belongs to two people (whoever provided the egg and sperm gametes), whereas, the egg just belongs to the woman and she can decide how it is used entirely independently.

The current legal time limit that an egg can be frozen for is 10 years unless theres medical reasoning to extend it, for example, if the woman was undergoing cancer treatment at a young age. There are current calls for the government to extend this limit.

According to Dr Sarris, when a patient wants to use their eggs, they effectively need to resume the process of the original cycle of IVF which stopped at the egg collection stage. The egg is thawed and fertilised by the sperm, he says. If the egg is successfully fertilised, it then becomes an embryo which is grown in the lab over the next few days and either be put back into the womans womb or it can be frozen again (this time as an embryo).

In order for a woman to have the embryo transferred into her womb, it has to be done in an embryo transfer cycle. This can be done in two ways, either the clinic will monitor the womans natural cycle and transfer the embryo at an appropriate time after ovulation, or the clinic can recreate a natural cycle by prescribing certain medicines that prepare the lining of the womb for the embryo to implant.

According to Dr Nicopoullos, the implantation process is very quick and no more invasive than a cervical smear test.

Success rates vary dramatically based on multiple factors, including the womans age at the time of egg collection (the younger the eggs, the higher the success rate), and her general health. Success rate of frozen eggs remains under some debate, says Dr Nicopoullos, but theres increasing research suggesting that success rates of using a frozen embryo are as similar to using a fresh embryo.

Dr Sarris explains that if the eggs are frozen at a clinically optimum age then the chances of success will be higher. However, it should be noted that obstetric (pregnancy) complications increase with a womans age. In addition, success is also dependent on how technically proficient the clinic is that freezes and thaws the eggs. Overall, he says the absolute chance of an egg giving a baby can vary from as low as 1% per egg to 5-6% per egg.

Lord Robert Winston, professor of fertility studies at Imperial College London and expert on egg freezing and IVF has publicly warned that success rates can be misleading. Speaking on BBC Radio 4 Todays programme, Lord Winston described the process as a very unsuccessful technology with a success rate of around 1%. However, he later clarified that he was referring to the number of live births, rather than the number of pregnancies. Sometimes, when a clinic gives a success rate, they are actually referring to the number of successful implantations into the womb (and subsequent pregnancies) rather than the live birth rate. The distinction between the two definitions of success can result in vastly different figures.

According to The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, in 2015, 2% of all thawed eggs ended up as pregnancies and 0.7% resulted in live births.

The average cost for one round of treatment is between 3500 to 4500, and there's usually an annual fee for storing the eggs of around 200 to 400 depending on the clinic. If you are receiving medical treatment that affects your fertility, you may be able to get egg freezing on the NHS.

Its up to the woman what happens to her eggs if she no longer wants to continue freezing them. They can either be discarded or donated to medical research.

Link:
Your Ultimate Guide To Egg Freezing From The Experts - GLAMOUR UK

GUEST VIEW: Darwins theory is true and consistent with religion – Utica Observer Dispatch

Frank Price| Observer-Dispatch

A Sept. 4 letter to the editor denigrating evolution contains numerous errors and misunderstandings which perpetuate the myth that science and religion are incompatible.

Darwins theory of evolution doesn't contribute to "lawlessness and godlessness." Millions of people here and in other countries who accept the reality of evolution live exemplary lives. (And many God-fearing people commit crimes.)

Science, in general, and evolution, in particular, do not deny God's existence. Science deals only with natural phenomenal involving space, time, matter and energy. God exists outside space and time, so science cannot say anything about Gods existence or nonexistence. Science is not an atheist religion. True, some scientists are atheists but so are many businessmen, plumbers and farmers.

Like many businessmen, plumbers and farmers, many scientists are religious. One example is Francis Collins, an evangelical Christian who directed the Human Genome Project and is currently director of the National Institutes of Health.

Collins is one of many scientific consultants to The Clergy Letter Project (TheClergyLetterProject.org). The project aims to demonstrate that religion and science can be compatible and to elevate the quality of the debate of this issue." It contains separate letters signed by more than 17,000 Christian, Jewish, Unitarian and other clergy members.

The Christian Clergy Letter, signed by more than 15,000 clergy, reads in part,

We the undersigned, Christian clergy from many different traditions, believe that the timeless truths of the Bible and the discoveries of modern science may comfortably coexist. We believe that the theory of evolution is a foundational scientific truth, one that has stood up to rigorous scrutiny and upon which much of human knowledge and achievement rests. To reject this truth or to treat it as one theory among others is to deliberately embrace scientific ignorance and transmit such ignorance to our children. We believe that among Gods good gifts are human minds capable of critical thought and that the failure to fully employ this gift is a rejection of the will of our Creator.

For the last 15 years, the project has sponsored Evolution Weekends near Darwin's Feb. 12 birthday. Congregations address issues on a theme related to science and religion through sermons, discussion groups, conversations and seminars.

This year, 232 congregations in 42 states, D.C., and six countries participated. More than 1,000 scientists from all 50 states, D.C., Puerto Rico, and 31 countries have signed on to serve as technical consultants to congregations.

All of the above demonstrates that the author of the 9/4 letter is clearly out of step with modern scientists and clergy. The supposed incompatibility of science and religion is actually a continuation of the age-old theological debate over whether particular sacred texts should be interpreted literally. For one example, St. Augustines 4th century A.D. book, On the Literal Interpretation of Genesis was not written in response to either the scientific revolution or Darwin's theory.

Theology aside, the letters author is also wrong about evidence for evolution. We have found numerous fossils intermediate between groups such as fish and amphibians[1] and other major life forms. In addition, we have observed the origin of new species in both nature[2] and in the lab[3].

Evolution is consistent with all known scientific laws. The writer cited the second law of thermodynamics. It states that in isolated systems matter goes from order to disorder. Anti-evolutionists mistakenly claim that abiogenesis and evolution represent increases in order and contradict the second law. However, living things are not isolated systems. Growth of human beings from fertilized egg to adult shows that order and complexity can increase.[4] Antievolutionists cannot deny the facts of embryology and human development, but blindly deny evolution.

In conclusion, the writer of the Sept. 4 letter is grossly mistaken about both science and religion. He is trying to push his religion into public school science classes, to unconstitutionally indoctrinate the children of those of us who dont subscribe to his narrow, distorted and false views.

[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiktaalik#Discovery

[2]https://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/news/100201_speciation

[3]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_experiments_of_speciation

[4]https://www.learnreligions.com/second-law-of-thermodynamics-and-evolution-3994654

Frank Price is aretired Hamilton College professorwho lives in Clinton.

Excerpt from:
GUEST VIEW: Darwins theory is true and consistent with religion - Utica Observer Dispatch

Menopausal Women May Be Able To Give Birth After Blood Plasma Injections – Anti Aging News

A menopausal woman has apparently given birth after receiving a blood treatment of platelet-rich plasma injected into her ovaries; 3 perimenopausal women have also had babies following the treatment according to a small pilot study at the Genesis Athens Fertility Clinic in Greece.

It appears as if menopause may not be the end of fertility as a team claims to have found a way to rejuvenate post-menopausal ovaries to enable the release of fertile eggs. The technique is suggested to have been able to restart menstruation in menopausal women, including one who had not menstruated in 5 years. If the results are able to withstand further scrutiny the technique may boost fertility in older women and allow those experiencing early menopause to become pregnant, as well as help to stave off the detrimental effects of menopause.

Professor Konstantinos Pantos is the fertility specialist who led the study in Greece, and he has been offering PRP treatments privately for the past 5 years, we have treated several hundred women' who were looking either to conceive or reduce the symptoms of menopause. According to Pantos They have a right to have a child, and we have to help them.

It offers a window of hope that menopausal women will be able to get pregnant using their own genetic material, says Konstantinos Sfakianoudis, a gynecologist at the Greek fertility clinic Genesis Athens.

It is potentially quite exciting, says Roger Sturmey at Hull York Medical School in the UK. But it also opens up ethical questions over what the upper age limit of mothers should be.

Women are thought to be born with all of their eggs, the number steadily declines between puberty and menopause with a fertility peak in the 20s. But around the age of 50, the ovaries stop releasing eggs, but most women are already largely infertile by this point as ovulation becomes more infrequent.

More women are having children in their 40s than ever before, but as more choose to delay motherhood many may find themselves struggling to become pregnant. Those who are hoping to conceive later in life are increasingly looking towards IVF and egg freezing, but neither are a for sure or truly reliable backup option.

For many women, life gets in the way of the best-laid plans and menopause can come all too early, even before the age of 40 for 1% of women either due to a medical condition or certain cancer treatments as examples. The researchers suggest that when PRP was injected into the ovaries of menopausal women, it restarted their menstrual cycles and enabled them to collect and fertilize the eggs that were released.

Sfakianoudis and colleagues are turning to a blood treatment that is used to help heal wounds faster to help turn back the fertility clock for women who have experienced early menopause. PRP is made by centrifuging a sample of a persons blood to isolate growth factors, and it is widely used to speed the repair of damaged bones and muscles. The team has found that PRP also seems to help rejuvenate older ovaries, and they have presented some of their research at the annual meeting of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology.

I had a patient whose menopause had established five years ago, at the age of 40, says Sfakianoudis. Six months after the team injected PRP into her ovaries, she experienced her first period since menopause. Since then 3 eggs were collected from this woman, 2 of which were successfully fertilized using her husbands sperm, the embryos are now on ice waiting to be implanted into her uterus.

The team suggests that they have given PRP in this way to 30 women between the ages of 46 and 49 who all want to be able to have children, and they say that they have managed to isolate and fertilize eggs from most of them.

It seems to work in about two-thirds of cases, says Sfakianoudis. We see changes in biochemical patterns, a restoration of menses, and egg recruitment and fertilisation. His team has yet to implant any embryos in post-menopausal women, but hopes to do so in the coming months.

In another group of women, this approach has already been helpful for pregnancy says Sfakianoudis. 10% of the women seeking fertility treatment at the clinic have a uterus that embryos have difficulty attaching to. After injecting PRP into the uteruses of 6 women who previously have multiple miscarriages and failed IVF attempts, three went on to become pregnant through IVF and are in their second trimesters.

Besides helping with fertility this treatment may also be desirable for those wanting to ward off hormonal changes that can also make the heart, skin, and bones more vulnerable to ageing and disease. Many women may be somewhat reluctant to take hormone replacement therapy to reduce these changes due to the link with breast cancer, but rejuvenating the ovaries with PRP could provide an alternative way to boost the supply of hormones that could delay the symptoms of menopause.

Sfakianoudis and the team have not published their findings yet saying that We need larger studies before we can know for sure how effective the treatment is. The researchers will also need to carry out randomized trials with a control group to know if their treatment really does improve fertility.

Although promising for many, this work does raise concerns over the safety and efficacy of the procedure which was not tested on animals first. It also raises ethical questions over upping the age limits of pregnancy and health issues like gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia, birth defects, and miscarriage which are all more common in older women.

Obviously its a very interesting topic [that] could be beneficial to a lot of people, said Heather Shapiro, president of the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society, adding that ovaries have many other functions beyond eggs. The big one is making estrogen, which may help ward off conditions such as heart disease. A decline in estrogen has been linked to an increase in heart disease in post-menopausal women. But she cautions against getting excited about these findings because more work is needed, and she believes we are still years away from safely being able to use this kind of procedure on humans.

This experiment would not have been allowed to take place in the UK, says Sturmey. The researchers need to do some more work to make sure that the resulting eggs are OK, says Adam Balen at the British Fertility Society. I lay awake last night turning this over in my mind, says Sturmey. Where would the line be drawn? It would require a big debate, says Sturmey.

Virginia Bolton, an embryologist at Guys and St Thomas Hospital in London, is also skeptical. It is dangerous to get excited about something before you have sufficient evidence it works, she says. New techniques often find their way into the fertility clinic without strong evidence, thanks to huge demand from people who are often willing to spend their life savings to have a child, she says.

Sfakianoudis and colleagues are also testing the PRP technique on womens uterine linings as well as on mens testes to help counteract male factor infertility.

Professor Konstantinos Pantos is overseeing 4 randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials, with another 2 trials being run by Professor Emre Seli at Yale School of Medicine to confirm PRP as a viable infertility treatment.

I can't tell you 100 percent that this is going to be a super useful intervention, said Professor Seli. But I find it very exciting.

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Menopausal Women May Be Able To Give Birth After Blood Plasma Injections - Anti Aging News

Woman successfully obtains order for use of husband’s frozen sperm without correct forms – Scottish Legal News

Published 28 September 2020

A woman who sought to undergo in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment using her late husbands sperm has succeeded in obtaining an order allowing its use for that purpose despite his not signing the relevant forms.

The petitioner, SB, wished to pursue IVF as it was the most likely method of success for conception in her circumstance. It was discovered the day before her husbands death that the consent forms completed by her husband only applied to intra uterine insemination (IUI).

The petition was heard by the Lord Justice Clerk, Lady Dorrian, sitting with Lord Glennie and Lord Woolman.

Wrong forms

The will of the petitioners late husband, JB, contained a clause relating to the storage and use of his sperm following his death. JB was advised by his doctor at the onset of the illness from which he died to store his sperm in case he wished to have children in the future. JB died in 2019, with the sperm being collected at a fertility centre approximately 10 years before.

At the time that JB stored his sperm, he did not have a partner. As a result, he was not given the relevant consent form for IVF. JB and the petitioner commenced fertility treatment during the final bout of his illness. Due to the fertility clinic not appreciating that time was of the essence, JB was receiving palliative care at the time an appointment was offered.

At this late stage it became apparent that the forms originally signed by JB were only those appropriate for men without a partner, and JB was unconscious and therefore unable to sign further forms. Affidavits given by the petitioner and a consultant indicated that IVF was the method of treatment most likely to succeed in the couples circumstances.

During JBs final illness, he had his solicitor insert a clause into his will directing that his executors ensure that his sperm be made available to the petitioner for as long as she may wish. It was submitted for the petitioner that the deceaseds will provided the consent required by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990.

Answers to the petition were lodged by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, NHS Grampian, and the Advocate General for Scotland. Opposition was maintained only on the basis that the result would subvert the statutory scheme, and the granting of orders was not opposed if the court was satisfied that the will constituted effective consent.

Expression of wishes

The opinion of the court was delivered by Lady Dorrian. After deciding that the petition was competent, she laid out the requirements for effective consent, saying that they were: (a) It must be in writing; (b) It must be signed by the deceased; (c) It must specify the purpose of use, and be clear that it encompasses consent to the creation of any embryo in vitro; (d) The individual must have been given a suitable opportunity to receive proper counselling about the implications of taking the proposed steps, and have been provided with such relevant information as is proper; and of the consequences in respect of the possibility of variation or withdrawal of consent; and (e) It must not have been withdrawn.

Applying these criteria to the present case, she said: The terms of the deceaseds will constitute sufficient consent to meet these requirements. It is in writing, it is signed and it has not been withdrawn. The remaining two conditions for effective consent relate to the opportunity for counselling and whether the terms of the clause are sufficiently clear to provide consent for the specific form of treatment that is involved in IVF.

On the construction of the deceaseds will, she said: We regard the following features as important. First, it is a testamentary document in which JB was not only making disposition of his estate but, by this clause, expressing his wish for the future use of his stored gametes. Second, he and his wife had sought and been referred for treatment to enable them to have a child. Third, although it is expressed as a direction to his executors, in reality it is an expression of his wishes.

She continued: For present purposes, we are not concerned with whether the clause could be given testamentary effect. The only question is whether it can be construed as granting the necessary consent. In our view there is no doubt that it can. It is the sort of provision that would only sensibly be made by a man contemplating his death in the near future, and seeking to make his wishes clear.

On the length of the storage period, she said: Where it is desired to store gametes for a period in excess of ten years for the provision of treatment services there must be written consent of the donor and a medical opinion to the effect that that person was, or may have been likely to become, prematurely infertile. The clause in the deceaseds will, specifying that the material be available to the petitioner for as long as possible, together with the opinion of the treating oncologist as to the deceaseds state of fertility, clearly meet these requirements.

For these reasons, the court granted orders that JB gave effective consent for the storage and use of his gametes for the purpose of IVF, subject to the statutory storage period.

Scottish Legal News Ltd 2020

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Woman successfully obtains order for use of husband's frozen sperm without correct forms - Scottish Legal News

I spent my 35,000 house deposit on having a baby alone it was the best decision Ive ever made – The Sun

HAVING recently turned 39 and with 35k saved to buy a house, Lisa Green decided to take her life in a different direction.

The single recruitment manager ditched her plans to own a home and spent the money on a baby instead through IVF with a sperm donor.

6

She had always wanted to be a mum, and was happy to do it without a partner. Her dream came true last October when she gave birth to daughter Francesca.

Now, when she sees her baby take her first steps or attempt to say Mummy, she feels like she has hit the jackpot.

Lisa, who is now 40 and lives in Solihull, West Mids, says: I set myself a deadline of having a baby by 40 and I have no regrets.

I had disposable income I was putting aside for a house deposit but I felt the time was ticking more on my fertility than it was on buying a house, and its the best decision I ever made.

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I love being a single mum. Im very lucky as shes a very well-behaved child.

And Lisa is not alone. According to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) more women than ever are deciding to parent without a partner.

Fertility treatment for single women has almost trebled in a decade. The average age of a woman seeking to start a family without a partner is 39, as clinics report rising numbers of want-to-be-mums struggling to meet someone they want to have kids with.

The number of IVF attempts by women trying to have a baby on their own has gone from 531 in 2008 to 1,352 in 2018.

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Lisa says: I wasnt bothered that I hadnt met the one yet but I was sure about having children. I never came across anyone that I could picture a future with.

But approaching my forties was the time my sister had her son Charlie and he melted everyones hearts. And being around him definitely made me broody. Thats when I decided to go into motherhood alone and began looking at my options.

Three years ago, Lisa looked into freezing her eggs, but scans and blood tests at BMI The Priory Hospital in Edgbaston, Birmingham showed her fertility was starting to decline so it was not an option.

She says: Although I had lots of eggs, they varied in quality so the chances of falling pregnant were slim. Thats when IVF was mentioned.

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I was shocked because it wasnt something I had even considered, but I felt it was a case of now or never.

Lisa paid 7,000 for her first round of IVF at BMI The Priory Hospital after choosing a sperm donor online.

She says: I was put in touch with three sperm banks after my IVF consultation with the clinic.

I wanted a white male of medium build with brown hair. It was a surreal experience, and crazy that in less than a year I could be a mum.

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Although the initial treatment was a success, Lisa miscarried at nine weeks.She says: I was heartbroken. I didnt know why I had miscarried or if it would happen if I tried again.

It was hard but I picked myself up and decided to give it another go.

Lisa spent another 5,500 on a second round of IVF. Two weeks later, she discovered she was expecting again and this time the pregnancy went to plan.

She says: The feeling was out of this world, and putting the nursery together and buying clothes for my baby was so exciting.

I refused to let my fears from my miscarriage creep in and I stayed positive.

I found out I was having a girl at my 20-week scan. Finally getting my wish of becoming a mum before 40 was unbelievable.

When Lisa went into labour she had her mum Tina, 64, and sister Jodie, 34, by her side. Lisa says: I was induced and a day later Francesca was in my arms. She weighed 6lb 11oz and I felt incredibly proud the moment I saw her. There were lots of tears and we were all smitten.

The rest of her savings - 22,500 - went towards her maternity leave. She says: I dont get any additional state benefits. Im self-funded.

6

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Lisa is now getting to grips with being a single mum. She says: It still doesnt seem real. Its taken me months to accept shes mine.

I used to worry what other people would say about how Francesca came into the world, but I get only positive comments. Even though I may now never be able to buy a home, I have no regrets.

Theres no time limit on buying a house but there is on having a baby.

COSTS

7,000 first round of IVF.

5,500 second IVF round.

22,500 paid out to help fund her living costs during maternity leave.

TOTAL: 35,000

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I spent my 35,000 house deposit on having a baby alone it was the best decision Ive ever made - The Sun