PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Test tube children develop mentally normal

The risk of mental disorders is not increased in IVF children; In contrast, children born after mothers solely treated with hormonal fertility treatment have a small but increased risk of mental disorders

2013-07-10
(Press-News.org) Whether a child is conceived naturally or in a Petri dish in an incubator has no bearing at all on the child's mental health. However, researchers have identified a small but increased risk of developing a mental disorder such as autism, ADHD or behavioural problems in children whose mothers only received medical treatment to stimulate ovulation and egg development before insemination.

This is the result of a new research project from Aarhus University and Aarhus University Hospital, which has compared the risk of mental illness in artificially fertilised and naturally conceived children. The study will be published today in the highly acclaimed British Medical Journal (BMJ).

In the project, researchers compared children aged up to 17 years from three different groups: naturally conceived children, children of mothers who only received medical treatment to become pregnant, and a group of children conceived using the so-called test-tube method, where fertilisation takes place outside the uterus.

The general conclusion of the study is that test-tube babies are generally just as mentally and physically healthy as naturally conceived children. On the other hand, the researchers found a measurable increase in the occurrence of mental disorders in children whose mothers received help to become pregnant through insemination treatment in the form of hormone stimulation to promote egg development and ovulation. Yet there is no obvious explanation for these results, according to one of the researchers behind the study, Bjørn Bay, MD and PhD fellow at Aarhus University and Aarhus University Hospital.

"In the study, we have taken account of the mother's age, education, smoking habits, mental history and other factors which may otherwise influence the risk. We can also discount the various types of fertility drugs which are given prior to becoming pregnant. If we suspected that the drugs were having an impact on the children's mental development, the effect would also be traceable in the group of test-tube babies – and it's not," says Bjørn Bay, adding that the explanation must be attributable to as yet unknown factors among childless couples.

"Beyond well-known factors such as age and smoking, it is important that we take a closer look at the differences between women who easily become pregnant and women who find it difficult.

Until then, the message from the researchers is that parents who have been helped by science to start a family have no grounds for concern. Even though the number of children with mental problems is on the increase, the risk is still only very small," says Bjørn Bay.

"At the end of the day, there are very few cases. The key message is that by far the majority of children develop normally, and that we see no reason to intervene in the treatment and the methods currently being used," says Bjørn Bay.

Facts:

An increasing number of couples are experiencing problems with involuntary childlessness, and more and more of them are seeking medical treatment. Here, the techniques range from insemination and mild fertility drugs to promote egg development and ovulation to test-tube treatment, where the woman is given fertility drugs, and selected eggs and sperm meet in a Petri dish and are then cultivated in an incubator until they are ready to be transferred to the woman's uterus. Denmark has highest proportion of children worldwide born to mothers who have received fertility treatment. Almost 10% of children born each year are conceived after one or other form of treatment. The results are based on register-based studies of almost 600,000 Danish children born in the period 1995-2003 and subsequently followed, making it one of the biggest and longest studies within this area in the world. The research has been conducted by doctors, psychologists and researchers collaborating at three universities in Denmark.

###

The group comprises Bjørn Bay, MD and PhD fellow at Aarhus University,Dorte Hvidtjørn, midwife and researcher at the University of Southern Denmark, Erik Lykke Mortensen, a psychologist and professor at the University of Copenhagen, and Ulrik Schiøler Kesmodel, consultant gynaecologist at the fertility clinic at Aarhus University Hospital.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Oldest use of flowers in grave lining

2013-07-10
When did people first begin to express their feelings with flowers? It turns out that in prehistoric times, Mount Carmel residents in what today is northern Israel buried their dead on a literal bed of fragrant wild flowers, such as Judean sage, as well as blooming plants of the mint and figwort families. Assuming they had the same positive associations with flowers that we do today, these ancient humans must have sought to ensure for the deceased a pleasant passage from the world of the living. The discovery is the oldest known use of flowers in grave lining. According ...

Heat radiation of small objects: Beyond Planck's equations

2013-07-10
This news release is available in German. All the objects around us emit thermal radiation. Usually, this radiation can be described very accurately using Planck's law. If, however, the radiating object is smaller than the thermal wavelength, it behaves according to different rules and cannot emit the energy efficiently. This has now been confirmed by a team of researchers at the Vienna University of Technology. These findings are important for heat management of nano-devices and also for the science of aerosols - microparticles suspended in air, which influence the ...

Huge iceberg breaks away from the Pine Island glacier in the Antarctic

2013-07-10
On 8 July 2013 a huge area of the ice shelf broke away from the Pine Island glacier, the longest and fastest flowing glacier in the Antarctic, and is now floating in the Amundsen Sea in the form of a very large iceberg. Scientists of the Alfred Wegener Institute - Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research have been following this natural spectacle via the earth observation satellites TerraSAR-X from the German Space Agency (DLR) and have documented it in many individual images. The data is intended to help solve the physical puzzle of this "calving". Scientists from ...

ALMA prenatal scan reveals embryonic monster star

2013-07-10
The most massive and brightest stars in the galaxy form within cool and dark clouds but the process remains not just shrouded in dust, but also in mystery [1]. An international team of astronomers has now used ALMA to perform a microwave prenatal scan to get a clearer look at the formation of one such monster star that is located around 11 000 light-years away, in a cloud known as the Spitzer Dark Cloud (SDC) 335.579-0.292. There are two theories on the formation of the most massive stars. One suggests that the parental dark cloud fragments, creating several small cores ...

Astronomers witness birth of Milky Way's most massive star

2013-07-10
Scientists have observed in unprecedented detail the birth of a massive star within a dark cloud core about 10,000 light years from Earth. The team used the new ALMA (Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array) telescope in Chile – the most powerful radio telescope in the world – to view the stellar womb which, at 500 times the mass of the Sun and many times more luminous, is the largest ever seen in our galaxy. The researchers say their observations – to be published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics – reveal how matter is being dragged into the centre of ...

Bacteria from Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia conceal bioplastic

2013-07-10
In Bolivia, in the largest continuous salt desert in the world, researchers from the Polytechnic University of Catalonia have found a bacterium that stores large amounts of PHB, a prized polymer. This biodegradable plastic is used by the food and pharmaceutical industries, for example to produce nanospheres to transport antibiotics. In the quest for natural polymers to substitute for petroleum-based plastics, scientists have recently discovered that a microorganism in South America produces poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), a biodegradable compound of great utility for ...

Calculating the value of effortful behavior: A clue to schizophrenia-related disability?

2013-07-10
Philadelphia, PA -- Many people with schizophrenia have marked problems with motivation, failing to initiate and persist in goal-directed behavior. These negative symptoms of schizophrenia can be disabling and prevent individuals from realizing their potential. For many years it was thought this was due to an inability to experience pleasure associated with successful goal attainment. However, recent laboratory studies have shown that hedonic experience is actually intact in people with schizophrenia, calling for new approaches to better understand these motivational ...

Photosynthesis: Membranes in tight corners

2013-07-10
Photosynthesis takes place in specialized membrane systems, made up of stacked disks linked together by unstacked planar leaflets. A team of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich has now identified a protein that tucks the membrane in at the edge of each stack. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) micrograph of a chloroplast in maize (Zea mays) showing thylakoids (green) and assimilation starch granules (grey). (Prepared by freeze fracturing; micrograph is pseudo-colored.) (Source: G. Wanner LMU) By making use of sunlight to generate molecular oxygen and other ...

Inscription from time of David & Solomon found near Temple Mount in Hebrew University excavation

2013-07-10
Working near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, Hebrew University of Jerusalem archaeologist Dr. Eilat Mazar has unearthed the earliest alphabetical written text ever uncovered in the city. The inscription is engraved on a large pithos, a neckless ceramic jar found with six others at the Ophel excavation site. According to Dr. Mazar, the inscription, in the Canaanite language, is the only one of its kind discovered in Jerusalem and an important addition to the city's history. Dated to the tenth century BCE, the artifact predates by two hundred and fifty years the earliest ...

Stanford researchers say 'peak oil' concerns should ease

2013-07-10
Fears of depleting the Earth's supply of oil are unwarranted, according to new research, which concludes that the demand for oil – as opposed to the supply – will reach its own peak and then decline. "Peak oil" prognosticators have painted pictures of everything from a calm development of alternatives to calamitous shortages, panic and even social collapse as the world reaches its peak of oil production – and then supplies fall. But according to the study by researchers at Stanford University and the University of California-Santa Cruz, those scenarios assume that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Fecal microbiome and bile acid profiles differ in preterm infants with parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis

The Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) receives €5 million donation for AI research

Study finds link between colorblindness and death from bladder cancer

Tailored treatment approach shows promise for reducing suicide and self-harm risk in teens and young adults

Call for papers: AI in biochar research for sustainable land ecosystems

Methane eating microbes turn a powerful greenhouse gas into green plastics, feed, and fuel

Hidden nitrogen in China’s rice paddies could cut fertilizer use

Texas A&M researchers expose hidden risks of firefighter gear in an effort to improve safety and performance

Wood burning in homes drives dangerous air pollution in winter

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 23, 2026

ISSCR statement in response to new NIH policy on research using human fetal tissue (Notice NOT-OD-26-028)

Biologists and engineers follow goopy clues to plant-wilting bacteria

What do rats remember? IU research pushes the boundaries on what animal models can tell us about human memory

Frontiers Science House: did you miss it? Fresh stories from Davos – end of week wrap

Watching forests grow from space

New grounded theory reveals why hybrid delivery systems work the way they do

CDI scientist joins NIH group to improve post-stem cell transplant patient evaluation

Uncovering cancer's hidden oncRNA signatures: From discovery to liquid biopsy

Multiple maternal chronic conditions and risk of severe neonatal morbidity and mortality

Interactive virtual assistant for health promotion among older adults with type 2 diabetes

Ion accumulation in liquid–liquid phase separation regulates biomolecule localization

Hemispheric asymmetry in the genetic overlap between schizophrenia and white matter microstructure

Research Article | Evaluation of ten satellite-based and reanalysis precipitation datasets on a daily basis for Czechia (2001–2021)

Nano-immunotherapy synergizing ferroptosis and STING activation in metastatic bladder cancer

Insilico Medicine receives IND approval from FDA for ISM8969, an AI-empowered potential best-in-class NLRP3 inhibitor

Combined aerobic-resistance exercise: Dual efficacy and efficiency for hepatic steatosis

Expert consensus outlines a standardized framework to evaluate clinical large language models

Bioengineered tissue as a revolutionary treatment for secondary lymphedema

Forty years of tracking trees reveals how global change is impacting Amazon and Andean Forest diversity

Breathing disruptions during sleep widespread in newborns with severe spina bifida

[Press-News.org] Test tube children develop mentally normal
The risk of mental disorders is not increased in IVF children; In contrast, children born after mothers solely treated with hormonal fertility treatment have a small but increased risk of mental disorders