Title of article :
Assisted Reproductive Technology after the Birth of Louise Brown
Author/Authors :
Kamel, Remah Moustafa Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology - Faculty of Medicine - Dammam University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia
Abstract :
Background: Public interest in Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) has remained
high since the birth of the world’s first in vitro fertilization baby, Louise
Brown, in the United Kingdom. ART allows scientists to manipulate the fertilization
process in order to bypass some pathological obstacles such as blocked fallopian
tubes and non-functioning ovaries in the females, and blocked vas deferens and low
sperm count in the males. The purpose was to provide a historical outline and identify
the researches that most contributed to ART.
Methods: A review of published experimental and clinical studies of assisted reproduction
carried out at the University of Bristol library website (MetaLib®). A crosssearch
of seven different medical databases (AMED-Allied and Complementary
Medicine Database, BIOSIS Previews on Web of Knowledge, Cochrane Library,
Embase, and the Medline on Web of Knowledge, OvidSP and PubMed) was completed
by using the key words to explore the major milestones and progress in the
development and implementation of ART.
Results: A speedy advancement in the development of different assisted reproductive
techniques makes infertility problem more treatable than it ever had been.
Conclusion: Although no other field in the medicine has integrated new knowledge
into the daily practice more quickly than ART yet, there is a need for social research
to counterbalance the dominance of biomedical one, in particular the people’s actual
experiences and expectations of ART.
Keywords :
Assisted reproductive technology , History , Infertility management , Louise Brown , Milestones , Timelines
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics