News
release
from Dr Kenneth Snell of the Acupuncture
IVF & Fertility Clinic in Sydney
Attention:
Editor
18/7/08
ivfrate 1
New
fertility treatment
yields higher birth rate
A new treatment to replace
or facilitate in vitro fertilisation in Australia seems to achieve a much higher
rate of pregnancies and births than most IVF programs around the world.
The treatment involving
acupuncture and Chinese medicine has been developed by Dr Kenneth Snell at his
Acupuncture IVF and Fertility Clinic in Sydney and put into practice over
the last year.
Dr Snell says he has helped
achieve an 87 per cent success rate for live births with his treatment program
compared with typical rates of less than about 40 per cent for most IVF
programs.
“Our clinic treats
couples wanting to enter an IVF program as well as couples who want to conceive
naturally.”
He says, “Our treatment
offers high hopes for couples everywhere who are seeking to overcome fertility
problems.”
He developed his treatment
with his own research and clinical experience with male and female infertility
and prevention of miscarriage.
In the 2007-2008 financial
year, 24 female patients completed his full program and 21 of them became
pregnant and gave live birth.
Three failed to become
pregnant.
There were no miscarriages.
That is an 87.5 per cent
success rate.
Of the 21 patients who
became pregnant and gave birth, 81 per cent became pregnant from natural
conceptions (no IVF intervention) and 19 per cent from conceptions using IVF.
Of the same 21 patients, 9
per cent were younger than 30 years, 48 per cent were from 30 to 34 years old,
24 per cent were from 35 to 40, and 19 per cent were 40 or older.
Dr Snell says that although
12.5 per cent of the patients failed to become pregnant, their hormone test results, follicle numbers
and egg quality increased to above acceptable levels.
Any patient who had not
fallen pregnant within six months was deemed as an “unsuccessful pregnancy”
for the purpose of his study.
About a third of the 24
patients he treated in the study had tried IVF before and failed.
Before
beginning Dr Snell's treatment program, 48
pc of the women were not ovulating, 33 pc had had miscarriages, 24 pc had
ovarian cysts, 29 pc had irregular menstrual cycles and 5 pc were not
menstruating.
Of their partners, 24 men,
10 pc had low sperm counts.
Dr Snell compares his
results against those of IVF programs in the United States.
The overall live birth rate
via IVF in the United States is generally less than 30 per cent, he says. Where
a woman's own eggs are used, not those of a donor, for women under 35, the live
birth rate is generally less than 40 per cent per cycle. The rate is much lower
for older women.
Dr Snell
recorded his 87 per cent success rate for live births with pregnancies achieved
over one to five menstrual cycles.
"Chinese
medicine is taken over more than one cycle usually," he says.
“Western
medicine tries to achieve a result within one cycle,” he says, “though a lot
of women fail their IVF cycles and return for multiple IVF treatments.
“So in the long run
Chinese medicine taken over a few cycles is usually quicker and more
effective."
Dr Snell (Dr of TCM) is a
member of the Fertility Society of Australia and the Australian Acupuncture and
Chinese Medicine Association.
He graduated from the
University Of Technology Sydney with a bachelor of health science in traditional
Chinese medicine and completed his clinical internship in the China Japan
Friendship Hospital, Beijing.
He continued his studies
with a three-year apprenticeship under Professor Lee Yuan and post-graduate
training in abdominal acupuncture in Beijing.
Natural fertility is a
specialised area of his training.
He runs the Acupuncture IVF
and Fertility Clinic, a Chinese medicine, infertility and gynaecology clinic, at
Chatswood on the North Shore of Sydney.
In vitro fertilisation (IVF)
is a medical process in which a woman's egg cells are fertilised by sperm
outside of her womb. This process involves hormonally controlling ovulation,
removing eggs from the woman's ovaries and letting sperm fertilise them in a
fluid. A fertilised egg is then transferred to the uterus in an attempt to
achieve pregnancy.
#end
Photo of Dr Kenneth Snell.
Media contact: Dr Kenneth
Snell – phone 61 2 9412-3844 or 0404877402; email dr@ivfacupuncture.com.au
.
Dr Kenneth Snell
Acupuncture IVF &
Fertility Clinic
Suite 228 / 1 Katherine St,
Chatswood, NSW, 2067, Australia
Ph: +61 2 9412-3844
Fax: +61 2 9412-1733
Email: dr@ivfacupuncture.com.au
Web:
www.ivfacupuncture.com.au