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

Deaths from IVF are rare but relevant

Editorial: Adverse outcomes from IVF

2011-01-28
(Press-News.org) Although still rare, maternal deaths related to in vitro fertilisation (IVF) are a key indicator of risks to older women, those with multiple pregnancy and those with underlying disease, warn experts in an editorial published on bmj.com today.

Dr Susan Bewley and colleagues argue that serious adverse outcomes related to IVF treatment, such as ovarian hyperstimulation sydrome (a complication caused by some fertility drugs), should be systematically reported so that lessons can be learnt and appropriate action taken.

In 1991, the first published report of a maternal death related to IVF predicted that rates would rise with increasing use of assisted reproductive technologies as a result of pregnancies at an older age, multiple pregnancies, and pre-eclampsia.

A recent study from the Netherlands also showed convincingly that overall mortality in IVF pregnancies was higher than the maternal mortality rate in the general population in the Netherlands (there were about 42 mothers' deaths per 100,000 IVF pregnancies compared to 6 deaths per 100,000 pregnancies overall), a fact confirmed from results in the UK.

The last UK Confidential Enquiry into Maternal Death recorded four deaths directly related to IVF via ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome and three deaths related to multiple pregnancy after IVF.

Thus, more deaths were related to ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome than to abortion (two) despite many fewer IVF procedures (for example, there were 48,829 IVF cycles v 198,500 abortions in the UK in 2007), say the authors. They also warn that IVF associated maternal deaths may be underestimates as confidentiality restrictions under the Human Fertilisation Act preclude accurate data.

The global industry has operated on an assumption that women undergoing assisted reproduction are healthier than average thus ensuring safer pregnancies, but the maternal mortality figures suggests otherwise, they argue.

Even though IVF pregnancy in the UK is still very safe, they add, deaths may reflect a far greater burden of severe adverse morbidity.

They believe that better information about the risks of fertility treatment is needed, better identification of high risk women, and more single embryo transfer as the norm to prevent death and disability.

"More stringent attention to stimulation regimens, pre-conceptual care, and pregnancy management is needed so that maternal death and severe morbidity do not worsen further," they conclude.

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study finds MRSA screening saves hospitals money

2011-01-28
Washington, DC, January 27, 2011 – Screening patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) produces cost savings for the whole hospital, according to a study that used a statistical simulation model published in the February issue of the American Journal of Infection Control, the official publication of APIC - the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology. Conducted by a team of researchers at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center, a 279-bed teaching hospital and outpatient facility, ...

ESRC report examines the pathway to economic recovery

2011-01-28
Authored by Economics writer Romesh Vaitilingam, Recovery Britain: research evidence to underpin a productive, fair and sustainable return to growth examines some of the challenges the UK faces after the longest and deepest downturn since full records began. The report provides 20 key challenge areas and a number of policy solutions. It draws on analysis of a broad range of data sources and the work of numerous researchers and research institutions, including centres and programmes, funded by the ESRC. The report also includes a foreword to the research findings by Professor ...

Report offers solutions to address decline in US dental faculty

2011-01-28
A new report by an Indiana University School of Dentistry department chair with researchers from six other U.S. dental schools is calling for quick and creative solutions to address the growing scarcity of full-time faculty members within the nation's dental school programs. The report cites widening pay gaps between private practice dentists and clinical professors at dental schools as one factor in fewer dentists committing to careers in teaching. Clinical faculty also report being overwhelmed and burned out by the workload demands of teaching, clinical, research and ...

Denmark, Finland and Belgium have best democracies

2011-01-28
A new democracy barometer from the University of Zurich and the Social Science Research Center Berlin (WZB) shows the development of the thirty best democracies in the world. Den-mark, Finland and Belgium have the highest quality of democracy, whereas Great Britain, France, Poland, South Africa and Costa Rica the lowest. Moreover, the barometer shows no evidence of a crisis of democracy. Diagnoses of a crisis of democracy are as old as democracy itself; they are a common theme in the political discourse of the Western world. However, until now there was no instrument ...

Scientists link protein to the insulation of the nervous system's wiring

2011-01-28
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have pinpointed a crucial function for a key player in the development of the nervous system. They found that this player – a protein called Erk – is necessary for nerve fibers to be wrapped with an insulating substance called myelin, which allows messages to be sent from the brain to the peripheral limbs and back again. The finding has particular importance because several neurodevelopmental disorders have recently been linked to genetic mutations in the complex developmental cascade ...

Universal solvent no match for new self-healing sticky gel

Universal solvent no match for new self-healing sticky gel
2011-01-28
Scientists can now manufacture a synthetic version of the self-healing sticky substance that mussels use to anchor themselves to rocks in pounding ocean surf and surging tidal basins. A patent is pending on the substance, whose potential applications include use as an adhesive or coating for underwater machinery or in biomedical settings as a surgical adhesive or bonding agent for implants. Inspiring the invention were the hair-thin holdfast fibers that mussels secrete to stick against rocks in lakes, rivers and oceans. "Everything amazingly just self-assembles underwater ...

Sprouts? Supplements? Team them up to boost broccoli's cancer-fighting power

2011-01-28
URBANA – A new University of Illinois study provides convincing evidence that the way you prepare and consume your broccoli matters, and also suggests that teaming broccoli with broccoli sprouts may make the vegetable's anti-cancer effect almost twice as powerful. "Broccoli, prepared correctly, is an extremely potent cancer-fighting agent—three to five servings a week are enough to have an effect. To get broccoli's benefits, though, the enzyme myrosinase has to be present; if it's not there, sulforaphane, broccoli's cancer-preventive and anti-inflammatory component, doesn't ...

New national study finds 34 percent increase in running-related injuries among children

2011-01-28
Researchers at the Center for Injury Research and Policy of The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital examined running-related injuries among children and adolescents 6 to 18 years old and found that an estimated 225,344 cases were treated in U.S. emergency departments from 1994 through 2007, for an average of more than 16,000 each year. During the 14-year study period, the annual number of running-related injuries increased 34 percent. According to the study, appearing in the February 2011 issue of Clinical Pediatrics, the majority of running-related ...

Current violent juvenile treatment methods costly, ineffective, MU researcher finds

2011-01-28
COLUMBIA, Mo. – In a time of shrinking budgets, one University of Missouri professor believes that the current approach to juvenile crime is much too expensive to continue – and he has the numbers to prove it. Charles Borduin, a professor of psychological sciences in the MU College of Arts and Science finds that multisystemic therapy (MST) is more effective in the lives of troubled youth and costs less. Borduin has pioneered the model for the treatment and prevention of serious mental health problems in children and adolescents throughout the course of his career. MST ...

Newborn screening increases survival outcome for patients with severe combined immunodeficiency

2011-01-28
(WASHINGTON, January 27, 2011) –Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) occurs in just one out of every 50,000 to 100,000 births in the United States, yet it is the most serious primary immunodeficiency disorder.[1] A study published today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology (ASH), demonstrates that babies with SCID who are diagnosed at birth and receive a hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), which is the transplantation of blood-forming stem cells, have significantly improved survival. SCID is a rare group of genetic disorders characterized ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Small changes in turnout could substantially alter election results in the future, study warns

Medicaid expansion increases access to HIV prevention medication for high-risk populations

Arkansas research awarded for determining cardinal temps for eight cover crops

Study reveals how the gut builds long-lasting immunity after viral infections

How people identify scents and perceive their pleasantness

Evidence builds for disrupted mitochondria as cause of Parkinson’s

SwRI turbocharges its hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine

Parasitic ant tricks workers into killing their queen, then takes the throne

New study identifies part of brain animals use to make inferences

Reducing arsenic in drinking water cuts risk of death, even after years of chronic exposure

Lower arsenic in drinking water reduces death risk, even after years of chronic exposure

Lowering arsenic levels in groundwater decreases death rates from chronic disease

Arsenic exposure reduction and chronic disease mortality

Parasitic matricide, ants chemically compel host workers to kill their own queen

Clinical trials affected by research grant terminations at the National Institutes of Health

Racial and ethnic disparities in cesarean birth trends in the United States

Light-intensity-dependent transformation of mesoscopic molecular assemblies

Tirzepatide may only temporarily suppress brain activity involved in “food noise”

Do all countries benefit from clinical trials? A new Yale study examines the data

Consensus on the management of liver injury associated with targeted drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors for hepatocellular carcinoma (version 2024)

Bridging the gap to bionic motion: challenges in legged robot limb unit design, modeling, and control

New study reveals high rates of fabricated and inaccurate citations in LLM-generated mental health research

New 'heart percentile' calculator helps young adults grasp their long-term risk

SwRI expands capabilities in large-scale heat exchanger testing

CRISPR breakthrough reverses chemotherapy resistance in lung cancer

Study reveals potential and beauty of the world unseen

Duke-NUS study: Over 90% of older adults with dementia undergo burdensome interventions in their final year

Not all PTSD therapies keep veterans in treatment, study warns

New research shows how friends’ support protects intercultural couples

FAU Engineering secures NIH grant to explore how the brain learns to ‘see’

[Press-News.org] Deaths from IVF are rare but relevant
Editorial: Adverse outcomes from IVF