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TEDxChange sparks conversation on key RMNCH issues

10 APRIL 2012 – Convened by PMNCH partner Melinda Gates, and hosted by TED’s Chris Anderson, last week’s TEDxChange event encouraged important conversations surrounding critical reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) issues—such as access to family planning for women in developing countries.

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New biorepository to help uncover mysteries of pregnancy and childbirth

Laying a foundation for discoveries that will improve maternal, newborn and child health everywhere, PMNCH member the Global Alliance to Prevent Prematurity and Stillbirth (GAPPS) has created the world’s first ever standardized, widely accessible repository of high-quality specimens linked to data from diverse populations of pregnant women.

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One for the Guys: That Azoospermic Feeling

At the beginning of the office visit, I like to ask men with no sperm in the ejaculate who are unable to conceive a simple question: “What crossed your mind when you first heard that you were azoospermic?” The answers varying greatly but are very telling:

  • “It must be a mistake.”
  • “I shouldn’t have joined that fraternity in college…”
  • “It wasn’t the best sample I’ve ever done.”
  • “I was simply and utterly devastated.”
  • “I was in shock and then got really depressed.”
  • “It changed my life…I always thought that I would be a father.”

The Meaning of Azoospermia

Azoospermia is the lack of sperm in the ejaculate. It can be due to a blockage in the system (obstruction) or failure of the testicles to make sperm (nonobstructive). The most common reason for blockage is a vasectomy. Other causes include infections, prior surgery, injury or congenital absence of certain reproductive tract organs. Failure to make sperm can be due to exposures (hot tubs), medications, varicocele, a history of undescended testicles, cancer and cancer treatment. However the largest chunk of men with poor sperm production have none of these issues. Instead, they have a subtle genetic cause: either they are missing genes on the Y chromosome or have other chromosomes harboring subtle alterations that do not otherwise affect their health or lives.

So, like Captain Renault in the movie “Casablanca,” most men with azoospermia are “shocked, shocked!” because they feel so normal in every other way. And the vast majority are normal (as normal as men can get) in every other way. Most of the things they worry about, like college indiscretions, are exposures that are entirely reversible with time. My response is usually to allay fear and guilt by saying: “This is not something that you have done to yourself; let’s see if we can do something about it at this point.”

Treating Azoospermia

In fact there is a whole lot that we can do with azoospermia. Men with blockages can often be unblocked with microsurgery, one of my favorite things to do. This gives them the chance to conceive naturally again. And most men with poor production as a cause of azoospermia will have pockets of sperm in the testicles that can be identified by techniques like sperm mapping and that can be used for high-technology pregnancies.

What I have learned after caring for hundreds of azoospermic men over two decades is that they really don’t care what their sperm counts are as long as they can be fathers. And once they are fathers, it is clear that that “azoospermic feeling” goes away, as it should.

 

Dr. Paul Turek is founder of The Turek Clinic in San Francisco, a former professor and Endowed Chair at the University of California San Francisco, and a pioneer in innovative techniques for treating male infertilty. He was recently the recipient of a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant for research designed to help infertile men become fathers. Check out Dr. Turek’s weekly blog on about common medical issues, solutions, and innovations at TurekOnMensHealth.com, where this blog post originally appeared.


Author:
Paul J. Turek, M.D.
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Texas Sperm Donor doesn’t Owe Child Support Court Rules

National bodybuilding champion Ronnie Coleman of Arlington thought he had an ironclad arrangement. Coleman agreed several years ago to donate sperm at a California sperm bank for a friend who used to live in Arlington, but he made clear that he had no interest in being a father to any child who was eventually born.

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Looking for the right surrogate? A new site rates surrogacy agencies

We recently read about the launch of Surrogacy Advisor, a new site that offers ratings of surrogacy agencies from parents who’ve used a surrogate to carry their child. The site also includes reviews and ratings of fertility clinics.

Surrogacy Advisor appears to be just getting started, so there’s definitely not a comprehensive list of agencies and clinics represented (and some are outside the U.S.), but over time it could become a valuable tool to help would-be parents who are looking for a reputable surrogate or a clinic to work with — one that others in their situation rated highly.  At press time, just 11 surrogacy agencies had ratings, with between three and 22 reviews for each. You can see the average cost for surrogacy at each rated agency, and how long the surrogacy “journey” took, on average, in months.

For fertility clinics, you can see a clinic’s overall score (based on a survey completed by parents who used it), the total number of reviews (at press time, CT Fertility had the highest rating, and also the greatest number of reviews – 26, compared to as few as three for many clinics — though only 10 clinics were listed, including a few outside the U.S.), as well as the percentage of patients who filled out the survey who conceived on the first cycle.

If you’re a prospective parent you can click here to complete a survey for an agency, and the site includes videos and articles about surrogacy as well.

Would you use a service like Surrogacy Advisor?

Author:

Lorie A. Parch

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Height, BMI, Tied to Ovarian Cancer

A new analysis of published and unpublished studies concludes that risk for ovarian cancer is associated with increasing height. It also finds that among women who have never used hormone therapy for the menopause, the risk for developing the disease is also tied to increasing body mass index, BMI, a measure of obesity.