Fertility in Focus

Sarah Goldman and her husband wanted to start a suggests couples talk to their physicians and consider that a family, but because of his spinal cord injury, they less-aggressive, nontraditional option—called mild/minimal- knew they wouldn’t be able to conceive tradition- stimulation in vitro fertilization—might be right for them. The Greenville, North Carolina, family looked at fertility clinics close to home, but after asking around they chose the Duke Fertility Center and infertility specialist Tom Price, MD. “Even though it’s a two-hour drive, we thought it was definitely worth it,” Goldman says. “We’d heard such great things about Duke, and Dr. Price was a wonderful doctor. The whole team was great. The in vitro fertilization [IVF] coordinator explained everything very thoroughly, and everyone was so friendly.” It’s that high-quality care and teamwork that attracted Suheil Muasher, MD, a reproductive endocrinologist and leading infertility specialist from Johns Hopkins, to join the Duke team. A contributor to more than 180 research studies and chapters in medical textbooks, Muasher is a popular speaker internationally. “I’m new to Duke, but not new to the fertility world,” Muasher says. In fact, Muasher is considered an authority in hormonal regulation in IVF cycles and brings to the Duke Fertility Center a new option for women and infertile couples. Muasher Traditionally, IVF is started by giving a woman hormones to produce multiple eggs. In a w...
Source: DukeHealth.org: Duke Health Features - Category: Pediatrics Tags: Fertility Source Type: news