Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Older women's eggs 'just as good'?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Jul, 2014 11:45 AM
    An old hypothesis that claims that as a woman ages, the eggs she will produce will have more faulty chromosomes - leading to miscarriages and developmental abnormalities - does not hold much water, says a new research.
     
    The production-line hypothesis stated that the first eggs produced in a female's foetal stage tend to have better connections or "crossovers" between chromosomes.
     
    But after counting the actual chromosome crossovers in thousands of eggs, researchers at Washington State University found that eggs produced later were no different from those produced early in the foetal stage.
     
    "If the production-line hypothesis was true, you would expect lots of abnormal cells and you would expect them all to be happening late," said Ross Rowsey, one of the researchers.
     
    "We do see a pretty high incidence of abnormal cells, but they are just as likely to be happening early as late," he added.
     
    Rowsey studied more than 8,000 eggs from 191 second-trimester fetal ovaries. He saw a lot of variation within women and between women, but no relationship to a woman's age.
     
    "There have to be other factors involved," he said.
     
    "The abnormal crossovers cannot be explaining all of it," Rowsey added.
     
    The production-line hypothesis was put forth in 1968 by Alan Henderson and Robert Edwards, winner of the Nobel Prize for development of in-vitro fertilisation.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert
    If happiness is what you are seeking, just be yourself - call an old friend to dinner or smile at a passerby - as a study has found that people with outgoing behaviour are a happier lot across cultures.

    Want to be happy? Be extrovert

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly
    Kids who watch more television sleep for shorter duration, a study has confirmed.

    Bedtime TV affects kids' sleep badly

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk
    Gear up for some physical exercise sessions as the risk of breast cancer may go up by 210 percent in obese and overweight women with a certain genetic marker, said a study.

    Ladies! Watch your weight to cut breast cancer risk

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women
    In a major breakthrough, scientists are now growing specialised organs such as vagina in the lab and successfully implanting them in patients. Four teenage girls received such an implant and the organs are working “normally” now, a study has said.

    Doctors can now grow engineered vaginas in women

    Astronauts' pee to get recycled into clean water

    Astronauts' pee to get recycled into clean water
    In between the news about water on Mars, clues of life on Jupiter or new stars being formed at our galaxy's edge, there is a less glamorous side of space exploration: what to do with astronauts' urine!

    Astronauts' pee to get recycled into clean water

    Grow bigger, stronger muscles with green tomatoes

    Grow bigger, stronger muscles with green tomatoes
    All of us love to eat red tomatoes but as unlikely as it sounds, green tomatoes may hold the answer to bigger, stronger muscles.

    Grow bigger, stronger muscles with green tomatoes