Nigeria records first baby by ‘freezed egg’.
Nigeria has recorded the birth of its first baby conceived through the oocyte (egg) freezing protocol.
The feat was recorded by The Bridge Clinic, Lagos, on February 16, with the delivery of a male child, named Tiwatope.
The oocyte was preserved through
cryopreservation, which is the cooling of cells and tissues to sub-zero
temperatures to stop biological activity and preserve the cells for
future use.
Human oocyte cryopreservation (egg
freezing) is a process in which a woman’s eggs (oocytes) are extracted,
frozen and stored. Later, when she is ready to become pregnant, the eggs
can be thawed, fertilised and transferred to the uterus as embryo.
According to the fertility physician
with The Bridge Clinic, Dr. Emmanuel Owie, who broke the news,
Tiwatope’s birth was significant in many respects, as he puts the
country on the global map in the practice of oocyte cryopreservation, a
new offering in the in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) space.
“Before his birth, this new practice
seemed to be an exclusive preserve of the developed world of Europe and
North America. It is even more significant considering the fact that
since the report of the first pregnancy through this protocol in 1986,
the practice has resulted in the birth of only about 5,000 babies
worldwide,” he stated.
Dr. Owie said Tiwatope’s mother had her
eggs frozen using the vitrification, also known as flash-freezing
process – the cutting edge technology in cryobiology, where the eggs or
oocytes of a woman are dehydrated and the water content replaced with
“anti-freeze” solution (cryoprotectants) before freezing. This will
prevent the formation of ice crystals, which could destroy the cell.
Tiwatope’s parents had battled infertility for eight years, but the clinic had the mother’s eggs frozen for two months.
Dr. Owie explained: “We fertilised the
eggs using a standard technique, known as intracytoplasmic sperm
injection (ICSI) to overcome the egg shell, which normally gets hardened
with freezing.
“The fertilised egg was subsequently
transferred into her womb, resulting in the pregnancy of Tiwatope. She
had her antenatal care in her family hospital and delivered the baby boy
through caesarian section (SC).”
The clinic’s coordinator, Corporate
Marketing/Communication and Client Relations, Dr. Ekundayo Omogbehin,
said the baby and the mother were in good health.
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