Nairobi IVF Center Ltd.
Nairobi, Kenya

We are the first IVF clinic in Kenya working since 2004. We offer wide range of assisted reproductive technologies including IUI, IVF and ICSI. We also offer GESTATIONAL SURROGACY, egg and sperm donor programs. To achieve the best results we have all modern equipment. Our experienced professional team works in close cooperation with Swedish and other European specialists.
Address:
LandMark Plaza,
Mezzanine floor Argwings Kordhek Road P.O. Box 29748 00202
Phone: +254 20 2731978
Web-site: http://www.nairobiivf.com



Thursday, September 22, 2016

Woman, 58, Delivers Twins In Kumasi


The twin girls

A record number of Ghanaian women who have been married for several years and unable to get pregnant have taken to artificial insemination to have their babies, a clinical embryologist, Isaac Kofi Adu, has said.

A 58-year-old woman in her menopausal stage is said to have delivered twins in Kumasi through the process.

According to Kofi Adu, babies born using treatments from in-vitro fertilisation and embryo transfer (IVF-ET) have increased since the establishment of in-vitro fertilisation hospitals in the country.

Speaking to DAILY GUIDE at the Trustcare Specialist Hospital & Fertility Centre in Kumasi where the 58-year-old woman delivered a set of twins, Mr Adu stated that although women today are generally healthier, fertility declines as people age.

A similar feat was recorded at Lapaz Community Hospital, where a 55-year-old woman was also delivered of twins a couple of months ago.

In the view of Kofi Adu, women's body produces fewer viable eggs when they get older, whilst men's sperms do not swim well as they age, creating fertility problems for couples.

The embryologist said this was the condition of the new nursing mother of twin girls when she visited the Trustcare Specialist Hospital in July 2015, having ceased menstruation for over 11 years.

“She underwent a surgical operation to remove a fibroid from her uterus (womb). Three months later, she was put on medication to enhance growth of the womb – as it had shrunk due to her menopausal state, and the IVF procedure commenced on February 2, 2016.

Mr Adu disclosed that the woman delivered of two girls last Wednesday after undergoing IVF treatment at the facility which has brought smiles back on her face.

“She was delivered of a set of twins through a caesarian session after a first IVF-ET attempt at the fertility centre. The first of the girls delivered weighed 2.1 kg, while the second one was 1.9 kg,” he asserted.

According to him, the IVF-ET is a specialised process in medicine that is used to help couples who for various reasons cannot get pregnant naturally.

In Ghana, the procedure was first introduced by a private specialist hospital in Tema in 1990.

He pledged the hospital's desire to continue supporting many more childless women to become mothers and bring happiness into their lives.

Records
The Trustcare Specialist Hospital & Fertility Centre has treated more than 30 post-menopausal women, some of whom were more than 50 years of age since December 2012.

Of the 30 women treated, nine of them were between ages 50-58. They have delivered singleton, twins and triplets, bringing happiness into marriages and families.

From Ernest Kofi Adu, Kumasi

SOURCE; modernghana.com

Monday, August 22, 2016

IVF: HOSPITAL PUTS NIGERIA ON MEDICAL MAP

State-of-the-art theatre at  Lily Hospital, Warri, Delta State, Nigeria
Our facilities, services make medical tourism unattractive, say doctors

Hundreds of hitherto barren partners are now having babies through the delicate breakthrough process known as In-Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) at Lily Hospital in Warri, Delta state.

The Guardian learnt that over 200 babies have been delivered through IVF at the privately-owned Hospital, which is reportedly pioneering the method in the Niger Delta region and has acquired state-of-the-art medical equipment for IVF births as well as paraphernalia for urology, orthopedic, otorhinolaryngology (treatment of ear, nose and throat) and key-hole surgery among others – all in the effort to end medical tourism by Nigerians.

The facilities at the Lily Hospital are said to be a relief to Nigeria’s deficient health sector as medical experts from other parts of the world including doctors from India team up with Nigerian doctors to give specialist medicare to patients, several of who are tourists from outside Nigeria.


Director of the IVF programme at the Lily Hospital, Dr. Louis Alekwe, told The Guardian that over 200 babies had been successful delivered via the IVF procedure at the hospital. He said even barren women over 50 years old have had babies including women who don’t have womb – as a surrogate mothers could be arranged to bear the pregnancy.

According to the doctor, even if a woman does not have a womb another woman could be made to carry the pregnancy for her. “That is if the woman’s eggs and the man’s sperm were used the IVF process the baby will look exactly like the man or woman because it is a genetic thing; the genes you are look at.”

He explained: “Many couples come here with their marriage at the brinks. We try to counsel them that what they really need is hope. There is really no reason why anybody should not have a child now; most people can be helped. If they can come forward most people can be helped. There are very few you cannot do anything for. There are always fears.”

Alekwe recalled a touching IVF case he handled at the hospital involving an elderly man married to a woman of about 34 years. Despite marrying for several years they remained childless.

“The man didn’t believe they could have baby through IVF. The woman came to me I checked her out and she was okay, then I invited the husband the man kept refusing. The woman broke down and cried. Later the man came we checked him there was no sperm in the ejaculate but we discovered that every other thing was okay with him. So it might have been a blockage of the testis and where the sperm comes out from. So we said let us try the testis if we will find sperm and when we found sperm – the man was happy! It was like a major victory, we had her IVF done and the woman had a beautiful baby girl.

“The husband did not believe he felt that what we were doing was a scam until the pregnancy came out and he believed. After then she had had two other babies through IVF.”

He disclosed that there are cases where the man’s testis is not producing sperm and that the man will have to decide whether to accept a sperm from another man – as there is hardly medical remedy to the condition – and that it is quite difficult to accept by some men.

On the common belief in Nigeria that childlessness was always the fault of women, the doctor said infertility is not only a problem associated with women but that it cuts across both men and women on 30 per cent ratio.

“It is more difficult for the men to accept- most of the time the women are willing, even when you tell a woman she doesn’t have eggs she is always willing to accept eggs from the other women, men find it much more difficult. Some women come here with the two tubes blocked, we go ahead and do the IVF. The normal process of conception is the man sleeps with the woman and deposit sperms there, they travel and get into the tubes the woman releases her eggs. The eggs enter this tube so the sperm and the egg meets there and they form the baby, so if this is blocked there is no way the egg and sperm can meet naturally. The usual cause of blockage most times is infection,” Alekwe said.

It was learnt that Nigerians and non Nigerians come from the United Kingdom (U.K.), Ireland, Canada, United States (U.S.) and other African countries on medical visit to the hospital because they reportedly discovered that even though the standard are the same as those in the advanced countries services are cheaper especially when air fares are factored in.


Delta State governor, Dr. Ifeanyi Okowa, recently commissioned the massive four-storey edifice housing the Lily Hospital with its modern medical equipment ranging from dopler scans, CT scans, 3D and 4D scan, ECG, Spirometry and Audiometry, and he said that with the up-to-date equipment he saw at the hospital that there was no need for Nigerians to embark on medical tourism.

A computerised tomography (CT) scan uses X-rays and a computer to create detailed images of the inside of the body. An electrocardiogram (ECG) is a test that records the electrical activity of the heart. Spirometry is a test that can help diagnose various lung conditions, most commonly chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). An audiometry exam tests your ability to hear sounds.

Similarly, the operating officer at Lily Hospitals, Dr. Austin Godwin Okogun, told The Guardian that with the advancement in the medical sector in Nigeria there was no need for Nigerians to travel out of the country to seek medical aid as several private hospitals in the country including Lily were now equipped with latest tools to manage any medical condition.