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Toronto's Zain Rajani Is The First Baby Born Using 'Game-Changing' Egg-Enhancing Treatment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 May, 2015 01:31 PM
    TORONTO — A Canadian woman is the first mother to give birth after undergoing a new procedure that boosts the health of women's eggs to improve the success rate of in-vitro fertilization.
     
    Natasha Rajani, 34, of Toronto gave birth to son Zain about three weeks ago.
     
    She underwent the AUGMENT treatment, which increases the ability of a woman's eggs to be fertilized and produce viable embryos.
     
    Fertility expert Dr. Robert Casper of Mount Sinai Hospital says Rajani is the first of several Toronto women to have the egg-enhancing treatment.
     
    The others are expected to give birth in the coming weeks and months. One woman is expecting twins.
     
     
    Casper believes the treatment developed by U.S.-based OvaScience will be a fertility game-changer by allowing more women to conceive through IVF and give birth to healthy babies.
     
    The treatment uses energy-producing mitochondria from a woman's own egg precursor cells found in the lining of the ovaries to supplement existing mitochondria in her mature eggs.
     
    Mitochondria convert nutrients into energy and are known as the powerhouses of every cell.

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    B.C. 'Hosed' In Port Coquitlam Land Sale To Liberal Donor

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    Indian P.M. Narendra Modi Arrives In Ottawa Today For Three-day Canadian Visit

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    Three Suspects In Custody Over Alleged Bank Fraud In B.C. And Alberta: RCMP

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    Oil Spill 90 Per Cent Cleared But Slick Reaches Beaches North Of City: Officials

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    B.C. treaty process too slow, but what's next for governments, First Nations?

    B.C. treaty process too slow, but what's next for governments, First Nations?
    VICTORIA — There is easy agreement between First Nations and the British Columbia and federal governments that treaty negotiations are languishing, expensive and fraught with obstacles, but all sides have completely different views on how to solve the trouble.

    B.C. treaty process too slow, but what's next for governments, First Nations?