Genetic test improves artificial fertilization
Polar body diagnosis can make
artificial fertilization more successful, according to Katrin and Hans
van der Ven and Markus Montag of Bonn University Clinic, writing in the
current edition of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl
Int 2008; 105[11]: 190-6).
If the two polar bodies in an egg
cell are examined, it can be seen whether the chromosomes are damaged
or whether the positions of the chromosomes are abnormal. This should
help to prevent pregnancies and births of severely ill children and
lead to higher implantation and birth rates.
Preimplantation
diagnosis (PID) on the individual cells of a developing embryo allows
the hereditary material to be examined directly. In Germany, PID is
thought to be incompatible with the German Embryo Protection Act. This
is why polar body diagnosis has become established in parallel to the
debate on ethical and legal issues. In the accompanying editorial, the
human geneticist Peter Propping asks whether it is honest that German
doctors continue to draw on PID results obtained abroad to compare the
reliability of polar body diagnosis. Go Back to Other News Stories
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