Zuko Komisa

- An Ohio couple has welcomed a baby boy from an embryo frozen 30 years ago.
- The couple adopted the embryo after struggling to conceive for seven years.
- Thaddeus’s birth represents a new milestone in reproductive technology.
A couple from Ohio are celebrating the birth of their son, Thaddeus, who was born from an embryo frozen for more than three decades.
The birth marks a new record for the longest-frozen embryo to successfully result in a live birth.
Lindsey Pierce, 35, and her husband Tim Pierce, 34, from London, Ohio, shared their incredible story with the MIT Technology Review, revealing they had been trying to have a child for seven years.
Their journey led them to embryo adoption, a process where they adopted an embryo originally created for another couple.
The embryo that would become their son, Thaddeus, was created via in vitro fertilisation (IVF) in 1994 and kept in cryogenic storage ever since.
Thaddeus was born on 26th July, bringing an end to the couple’s long wait for a family.
The IVF process involves stimulating a woman’s ovaries to produce eggs, which are then fertilised with sperm in a lab. The resulting embryos can either be implanted immediately or frozen for later use.
This remarkable birth highlights the incredible advances in reproductive technology and offers new hope to couples struggling with infertility.
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