Human Reproduction : Audio Productions, Inc. : Free …

The Film I Never Got to See...

The lead-in is a vignette of a little boy who presses his parents for more information about why Mommies bring babies into the world. The scripting is thin, but it serves it's purpose well enough.

When I was in grade school, neither my school nor my parents wanted anything to do with informing me about sex, or the anatomy of a man. Those were to be avoided at all costs. (I remember saying "Eewwww! I would NEVER touch a man there!!!) In the end, I got the information from the secret section in the reference department of the school library where books that were never to be taken out lived.

Some parents may balk at the idea that their child will become sexually aware, but the sad news is, holding back because your religion or upbringing prevents it, can, in this day and age, have dire health consequences. With the collapse of the laws that protected children from televised references to sex, we are seeing more and more foul language. The "F" word has become so common that it's bandied about carelessly, and using it quickly became as annoying and repulsive as "Y'know" or "Gag me with a spoon!" during the Valley Girl days came to be.

Video games and anime are both rife with sexual content, little of which is balanced or "healthy" Chances are very good that your children will know the meanings of "hentai", "yaoi", and "ecchi", long before you ever get around to talking to them yourself, and given that some Japanese sexual material is STILL couched in old traditions, they may also be exposed to depictions of forced sex and sex with children. (In ages past in Japan, it was possible to buy or trade goods for the virginity of a young girl. That would mean her first experience would be with someone much older, and whom she barely knew.)

While Japan is making solid inroads in making cultural and societal changes that ban such manga material, they will not achieve it for sometime to come, and given the spectrum I've seen thus far, no child, who has full, unsupervised access to the Internet, will be immune, and given that the Internet is the ultimate source of freely available information, any parent would be foolish not to guide the child in a safe and responsible way. After all, pioneers, trekking across the US, and the Native Americans in their many tipis all conceived and brought up families in close proximity to older children. They can handle it, if you can, and if you can't, this film might be a really good place to start. If they know that they can come to you for straight answers, they will enter the world of adults with a backup team that can support them and dispel rumors as they mature. It would be far worse if the bulk of their knowledge on the subject came from lurid cutscenes in Grand Theft Auto V.

Therefore, in summation, I heartily recommend this film for its accuracy and for its candor, and for its depiction of a functioning family able to communicate with each other.

Read the original:
Human Reproduction : Audio Productions, Inc. : Free ...

Center for Human Reproduction

Country Select Country United States Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo Congo, The Democratic Republic of The Cook Islands Costa Rica Cote D'ivoire Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guinea Guinea-bissau Guyana Haiti Heard Island and Mcdonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran, Islamic Republic of Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco Mongolia Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territory, Occupied Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Reunion Romania Russian Federation Rwanda Saint Helena Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Vincent and The Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia and Montenegro Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and The South Sandwich Islands Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Svalbard and Jan Mayen Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan, Province of China Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand Timor-leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States United States Minor Outlying Islands Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Viet Nam Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, U.S. Wallis and Futuna Western Sahara Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe

State (USA-only) Choose State (USA-only) AK AL AR AS AZ CA CO CT DC DE FL GA GU HI IA ID IL IN KS KY LA MA MD ME MI MN MO MP MS MT NC ND NE NH NJ NM NV NY OH OK OR PA PR RI SC SD TN TX UT VA VI VT WA WI WV WY

Please tell us about the service you're interested in and your fertility history.

Read the rest here:
Center for Human Reproduction

infertility problems | Best ivf centre in India | Best ICSI Clinic in India – Video


infertility problems | Best ivf centre in India | Best ICSI Clinic in India
Virk Fertility Services is the first IVF centre in India to be accredited by NABH Safe-I. VFS Centre For Human Reproduction, an ISO 9001-2008 certified ART Centre offers a comprehensive range...

By: Centre of Human Reproduction

Continued here:
infertility problems | Best ivf centre in India | Best ICSI Clinic in India - Video

best infertility treatment in india | Best ivf centre in India | Best ICSI Clinic in India – Video


best infertility treatment in india | Best ivf centre in India | Best ICSI Clinic in India
Virk Fertility Services is the first IVF centre in India to be accredited by NABH Safe-I. VFS Centre For Human Reproduction, an ISO 9001-2008 certified ART Centre offers a comprehensive range...

By: Centre of Human Reproduction

Go here to see the original:
best infertility treatment in india | Best ivf centre in India | Best ICSI Clinic in India - Video

Best IVF centre in India | best ICSI treatment | IVF Treatment | Fertility | best IVF in india – Video


Best IVF centre in India | best ICSI treatment | IVF Treatment | Fertility | best IVF in india
VFS Centre For Human Reproduction, an ISO 9001-2008 certified ART Centre offers a comprehensive range of infertility services under one roof and we are known for our innovation, integrity,...

By: Infertility Treatment

Read the rest here:
Best IVF centre in India | best ICSI treatment | IVF Treatment | Fertility | best IVF in india - Video

how much is IVF treatment in india | Best IVF and ICSI Treatment in india – Video


how much is IVF treatment in india | Best IVF and ICSI Treatment in india
VFS Centre For Human Reproduction, an ISO 9001-2008 certified ART Centre offers a comprehensive range of infertility services under one roof and we are known for our innovation, integrity,...

By: ICSI Treatment

More:
how much is IVF treatment in india | Best IVF and ICSI Treatment in india - Video

Life Science 007: Human reproduction: hormonal control of female reproductive cycle – Video


Life Science 007: Human reproduction: hormonal control of female reproductive cycle
Life Science 007: Human reproduction: hormonal control of female reproductive cycle Lesson objectives: To explain the interaction of the different hormones t...

By: SABC Education Shows

View original post here:
Life Science 007: Human reproduction: hormonal control of female reproductive cycle - Video

Scientists Pumped Ovarian Tissue Full of Sugar and Microwaved It. Here’s Why – Smithsonian.com

Brine shrimp have a neat trick up their sleeves. When dried out, these teeny crustaceans will fill their cells with a sugar called trehalose that suspends molecules within a glassy matrix, preserving them like fossils in amber. Heres what makes the situation even sweeter: Plop the brine shrimp into water, and theyll spring back to life, good as new.

While thats swell for brine shrimp, most other animals havent had the ability to dry their tissues into suspended animationuntil now.

Inspired by creatures like brine shrimp, Smithsonian scientists used trehaloseand a commercial microwaveto dry and preserve living cat ovarian tissue at temperatures above freezing, they report in a recent study published in PLOS ONE. Though some cells sustain damage from the dehydration process when revived, many survive and appear to retain basic functions, including transcribing their DNA in preparation for protein production.

The study is the first to show that pieces of these delicate organs, which harbor eggs in various stages of development, can be safely stored through the simple act of drying, and may remain viable in the aftermath. While the procedure is still in its early stages and has yet to move into human samples, it could someday give researchers an efficient, cost-effective way to safeguard tissues for fertility preservation, wildlife conservation and organ transplantation.

This is the first step toward long-term preservation [by drying], says Yuting (Fanny) Fan, a reproductive endocrinologist at the University of Michigan who wasnt involved in the study. Theres a long way to go before this can be used as a routine method to preserve tissue. . . but its a very innovative approach.

Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI) researchers Pei-Chih Lee and Pierre Comizzoli designed the technique, aptly named microwave-assisted dehydration, as a potential alternative to cryopreservation, in which living tissues are cooled and stored at very low temperatures with the help of liquid nitrogen.

Cryopreservation is currently the gold standard for preserving living biomaterials for the long term, Comizzoli says. But maintaining this chill requires a lot of expensive equipment, energy and human labor, and excludes under-resourced parts of the world from utilizing the technique and burdening researchers where its widely deployed.

At its best, microwave-assisted dehydration could circumvent some of these issues. If dried into a stable state, tissues could be kept on shelvesno refrigerators or hazardous materials necessarypotentially cutting the typical cost of cryopreservation by up to 90 percent, says Comizzoli, whos been working on preserving reproductive tissues for much of his career. But technology isnt ready to support room temperature storage just yet.

A few years ago, Comizzoli and his team successfully used microwave-assisted dehydration on cat eggs and spermthe single-celled units of reproduction. The latest study, performed in complex, multicellular tissues, brings the researchers one step closer to their goal.

The method is pretty straightforward, Lee explains. After first slicing ovarian tissue into small chunks, the researchers treated the samples with a chemical that makes cells porous and flooded them with a solution of trehalose. Once the cells were full of sugar, they began the slow process of drying the tissues out in a commercial microwave set to 20 percent power.

Intermittently pulsing the tissues with microwaves steadily zapped them of their water without skyrocketing their temperature, Lee explains. As the cells dried out, the sturdy bits of trehalose cushioned them, preventing collapse.

Everything is stabilized in a glass, Comizzoli says. You suspend interactions between the molecules and their biophysical properties. . . thats how you are able to suspend life.

The tissues were then stored for about a day at 39 degrees Fahrenheitthe temperature of a standard refrigeratorbefore being rehydrated in water. (Eventually, Comizzoli would like to get the tissues stable enough to last without refrigeration.)

Lee and her colleagues tinkered with every step, including laboriously trying out different stints in the microwave. Almost across the board, the researchers were able to revitalize cells that had been dried for up to 30 minutes. Though there were some casualties, most plumped back up to their normal shape in water, and seemed to have their DNA intact.

Looking fine, however, isnt the same as working fine, and its still unclear just how functional the rehydrated cells are. The longer the tissues were microwaved, the more basic cellular processes like DNA transcriptionthe first step in protein productionwere compromised. And when ovarian tissue was dried for more than ten minutes, only a small fraction of the follicles, which contain immature eggs, survived.

Comizzoli stresses that these experiments primarily demonstrate proof-of-conceptto show that a more fine-tuned procedure would even be possible. Now that we have that, we are [trying to] improve everything, he says.

The team is already in the midst of experiments to optimize their protocol by simultaneously maximizing preservation and minimizing cell damage. Once those parameters are a little clearer, he says, theyll start testing how well the reanimated tissues perform at their intended function: reproduction.

What the team is trying to accomplish is a difficult feat, says Monica Laronda, a fertility preservation expert at Northwestern University who wasnt involved in the study. Some of the most important experiments are those yet to come, including assessing the health of tissues after much longer periods of storage. Eventually, the team will want to see if the tissues keep bouncing back in the days and weeks after resuscitationor even survive a transplant back into a living body.

If the teams success continues, the researchers ultimately plan to expand their technique into other mammalian species. At SCBI, Comizzoli and his colleagues have long been engaged in preserving and restoring the worlds biodiversity. Part of their mission is to oversee the breeding of endangered species and their subsequent reintroduction in the wildsomething that could get a huge boost from a freezer-free method for storing and transporting reproductive tissues.

Shifting into human medicine is much further out of reach, but certainly appealing. One group that could benefit immensely from the technique includes female cancer patients who need to undergo chemotherapy, a harsh procedure that often destroys fragile reproductive tissues. To safeguard their ovariesand the eggs withinsome women turn to cryopreservation to freeze the tissue while they finish treatment, Fan says. Microwave-assisted dehydration could someday offer these patients a cheaper, more convenient option.

Theres also no reason the technique couldnt be used in other tissue types, Comizzoli says.

Cooling techniques have already made their way into organ transplantation research, and the same could certainly be attempted with dehydration. If that pans out, then it might be a good thing that the first tests were in reproductive tissues, he says, because theyre the most complicated ones.

Cryopreservation is a big industry, but it doesnt have to have a monopoly over tissue preservation. Its inconvenient, Fan says. Thats why its critical to study other methods.

Theres a long way to go before microwave-assisted dehydration becomes a serious contender, but with studies like these, she says, theres already some hope.

Go here to see the original:
Scientists Pumped Ovarian Tissue Full of Sugar and Microwaved It. Here's Why - Smithsonian.com

Human Reproduction – CPALMS

Subject(s): Science

Grade Level(s): 9, 10, 11, 12

Suggested Technology: Computer for Presenter, Computers for Students, Internet Connection, LCD Projector

Instructional Time: 2 Hour(s) 30 Minute(s)

Resource supports reading in content area:Yes Freely Available: Yes

Keywords: Seminal vesicle, testes, prostate gland, urethra, penis, scrotum, epididymis, vas deferens, ovaries, oviduct (fallopian tubes), uterus, vagina, cervix, implantation, morula, blastocyst, gastrulation, neurulation, amniotic fluid, amnion, placenta, umbilical cord, amniotic sac, reproduction

Sorry! This resource requires special permission and only certain users have access to it at this time.

Students will:

Assessing Prior Knowledge: Why do organisms need to reproduce? Students should recall that organisms need to reproduce to continues as a species.

The teacher can review the concept maps of the reproductive system on the board.

Commit and Toss: This can be done at the end of the unit. Ask the class the question "Why is it important for a woman to be cautious of her diet and health during the first trimester of pregnancy?" The students answer the question on a small piece of paper and toss their paper across the room. The teacher calls on other students to read the answers. The teacher can make comments on the answers.

The card activity can be colored for visual learners. The activity can be cut into individual cards. The students can use the book as a resource.

High Level Extension - Students can explore the ethics and dilemmas of teen pregnancy as well as the changes that occur during pregnancy.

Students can explore the case study Amber's Secret.

The teacher may want to create the worksheet to accompany the NOVA episode "Life's Greatest Miracle."

The teacher may want to check the local school/district media centers to see if they carry a copy of the video.

The teacher needs to make a class set of the Reproductive Cards ahead of the activity.

Contributed by: Cathy Organt

Name of Author/Source: Cathy Organt

District/Organization of Contributor(s): Escambia

Is this Resource freely Available? Yes

Access Privileges: Public

Original post:
Human Reproduction - CPALMS

Toxic Exposure: Chemicals Are in Our Water, Food, Air and Furniture – University of California

When her kids were young, Tracey Woodruff, PhD, MPH, knew more than most people about environmental toxics. After all, she was a senior scientist at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). But even she never dreamed, as she rocked her children to sleep at night, that the plastic baby bottles she used to feed them contained toxic chemicals that could leach into the warm milk.

Back then, in the late 1990s, it wasnt widely known that the chemicals used in plastic sippy cups and baby bottles can potentially disrupt child development by interfering with the hormone system. That, in turn, could alter the functionality of their reproductive systems or increase their risk of disease laterin their lives.

When I had babies, I did many of the things we now tell people not to do, says Woodruff, who for the past decade has been the director of UC San Franciscos Program on Reproductive Health and the Environment (PRHE). Also a professor in the Universitys Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, she earned her doctorate in 1991 from a joint UCSF-Berkeley program in bioengineering and then completed a postgraduate fellowship at UCSF.

Woodruffs children have since grown into physically healthy teenagers, but many children are not as lucky. Unregulated chemicals are increasing in use and are prevalent in products Americans use every day. Woodruff is concerned by the concurrent rise in many health conditions, like certain cancers or childhood diseases, and the fact that the environment is likely to play a role in those conditions. What motivates her is the belief that we need to know more about these toxics so we can reduce our exposure to the worst of them and protect ourselves and our children from their harmful effects. (Woodruff points out that the word toxics as a noun means any poisonous substances, from either chemical or biological sources, whereas toxins are poisons only from biological sources, either plant or animal.)

The PRHE is dedicated to identifying, measuring and preventing exposure to environmental contaminants that affect human reproduction and development. Its work weaves together science, medicine, policy and advocacy.

For example, research over the past 10 years by UCSF scientists and others has showed that bisphenol A (BPA) an industrial chemical used since the 1950s to harden plastics in baby bottles, toys and other products is found in the blood of those exposed to items made with BPA and that it can harm the endocrine systems of fetuses and infants. As a result, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) outlawed BPA in baby products in 2012, and some manufacturers developed BPA-free products. But now scientists believe the chemicals that replaced BPA may be just as harmful.

Furthermore, BPA is only one in a long, long list of chemicals we encounter every day in our homes, schools, workplaces and communities. And scientists have barely scratched the surface of understanding them. Of the thousands and thousands of chemicals registered with the EPA for use by industry, the agency has regulated only a few.

In the last 50 years, we have seen a dramatic increase in chemical production in the United States, Woodruff explains. Concurrently, theres been an increase in the incidence of conditions like attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism, childhood cancers, diabetes and obesity. Its not just genetic drift, Woodruff maintains.

And were all at risk from increasing chemical exposure. The water we run from our taps, the lotion we smear on our skin, the shampoo we rub in our hair, even the dust in our houses is full of synthetic chemicals.

PRHE experts do more than just measure such trends. They also collaborate with clinical scientists and obstetricians at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital (ZSFG), so their findings directly benefit pregnant patients. We partner with the clinical scientists, explains Woodruff, because they look at treatments for disease, and environment might be a missing factor in the cause and prevention of disease.

Though environmental toxics affect us all, theres a reason PRHE focuses on pregnant women and children, Woodruff adds. Exposure to even tiny amounts of toxic substances during critical developmental stages can have outsize effects. So exposure to toxics is especially detrimental to fetuses, infants and young children, as well as preteens and teenagers.

If you prevent the problem at the beginning, you get a lifetime of benefits, says Woodruff.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) began measuring human exposure to chemicals in 1976. These so-called biomonitoring studies found a range of toxics in subjects blood and urine substances like DDT, BPA, air pollutants, pesticides, dioxins and phthalates. Phthalates, for example, are a class of chemicals known to be endocrine disruptors but widely used as softeners in plastics and as lubricants in personal-care products. Biomonitoring has determined that women of reproductive age evidence higher levels of phthalates than the population at large. One reason, says Woodruff, is that young women use more products like perfume, deodorant, shampoo and conditioner.

Woodruff herself recently led a study in which UCSF researchers collected blood samples from pregnant women at ZSFG. After the women delivered their babies, the researchers collected umbilical cord blood samples and discovered that almost 80 percent of the chemicals detected in the maternal blood samples had passed through the placenta to the cord blood. It was the most extensive look yet at how the chemicals that pregnant women are exposed to also appear in their babies cord blood (and followed an earlier study by Woodruff that marked the first time anyone had counted the number of chemicals in the blood of pregnant women). Published in the Nov. 1, 2016, print edition of Environmental Science and Technology, the study also found that many chemicals were absorbed at greater levels by the fetuses than by the pregnant women.

Now, Woodruff is hard at work on a new grant from the federal Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program. It aims to correlate childrens exposure to toxics with their developmental outcomes from birth to age four.

The good news is that the work done by Woodruff and her team shows a clear impact. Following bans (some permanent and some temporary) on certain phthalates, for example, UCSF researchers measured declines in the urinary concentrations of the permanently banned types in a representative sample of the U.S. population.

Tracy Woodruff spreads the word about toxics at UCSF's Stand Up For Science teach-in. Photo by Noah Berger

Woodruffs degree is in engineering, and she notes that in the 1980s, when she was in school, a lot of engineers went into the defense industry. People talk about joining the military to serve their country, Woodruff says. I also wanted to do something positive for society, and I felt joining the EPA was the best way to serve my country.

She spent 13 years at the federal agency, as a scientist and policy advisor, studying the effects of air pollution on childrens health. The topic interested her, she says, because children are vulnerable and cant speak for themselves. Her analysis of data collected under the Clean Air Act, for example, found that air pollution is linked to infant mortality. She also determined that pregnant African American women had higher exposure to air pollution and more adverse pregnancy outcomes than the population at large.

Nearly 25 years later, her work at UCSF is motivated by the same sense of advocacy and zeal. She joined the PRHE in 2007, shortly after its founding by Linda Giudice, MD, PhD. What we do, she says, is bring the best scientific tools from the varied fields at UCSF to bear on uncovering and better understanding the links between the environment and health and translate that science into prevention by improving public policy.

While Woodruff has many influential scientific publications to her name, shes also a sought-after guest for radio interviews and talk shows. She even appeared in a popular 2013 documentary, The Human Experiment, narrated by Sean Penn. In response to questions from the public, she tries to strike a practical note. You dont want to freak people out, she says. At the same time, people assume if they can buy it, its safe. That is just not the case.

In her own home in Oakland, Woodruff has made slow changes over time. I got rid of carpet. ... The padding can contain toxic chemicals. I waited to buy a couch ... too long according to my family, she laughs. (Couches without flame-retardants didnt become available in California until after the state changed its flammability standard in 2014, making it possible to sell couches that are flammability-safe but are made without flame-retardant chemicals.) I still have a couch that probably has flame-retardants, but I am just ignoring it. We eat mostly organic to reduce pesticide exposure. Less is more in personal-care products, she adds.

Does she make her own shampoo?

Oh, my God, no, she answers. Who has the time? This should not be a burden to people. Systems should be in place so that we can be free of the burden. This is why we need the EPA, and this is where policy comes in.

Its important for people to realize there are things you can do to lower your exposure to toxic chemicals, but some things you cant do.

For example, Woodruff explains, Americans would have had a hard time limiting their exposure to lead before leaded gasoline became illegal in 1996 (though the phaseout started in the mid-1970s). Until then, no amount of personal awareness could protect someone from lead it was in the air that everyone breathed.

She offers another example specific to the PRHEs efforts. When California outlawed flame retardants, she says, we saw levels decrease by about two-thirds in the blood of pregnant patients at ZSFG. Through these studies, we can evaluate the effectiveness of public policy. Its clear that when the government acts to reduce exposures to toxic chemicals ... we see a positive change. We do not always consider EPA a public health agency, but it is.

Woodruff and her colleagues also have been working over the last several years to help strengthen the federal Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) of 1976. It was well recognized that the law was flawed and allowed thousands of chemicals to be used in the marketplace without testing for safety, she explains. When bipartisan calls to strengthen the law led Congress to amend it in 2016, PRHE experts partnered with obstetricians and gynecologists to provide scientific evidence about the need for improved standards, deadlines and transparency. As rules for the amended TSCA are rolled out over the next two years, well be right in there to promote the use of science for the publics health, says Woodruff.

Shes also bringing environmental toxics to the attention of her UCSF colleagues in other disciplines. One of the reasons we love being at UCSF is we can learn from people who are doing completely different things, she says. For example, she is working with researchers who study the placenta, since her 2016 study showed that environmental toxics permeate the placenta. And with developmental biologist Diana Laird, PhD, an associate professor in the Center for Reproductive Sciences, Woodruff is co-leading the Environmental Health Initiative (EHI). The EHIs goal is to involve researchers from throughout UCSF from the biological, population and translation sciences in solving and preventing the environmental burden of disease, starting with ensuring healthy pregnancies.

The EHI will link faculty across the campus, to add an environmental component to their work, Woodruff says. We have already hosted several networking events and symposia with the Research Development Office toward our goal of norming the environment within the research community. We want people to be saying, We need to address the environmental consequences to fully solve health issues.

This is about prevention, she concludes. People talk about nutrition and social competencies of health. Theres another thing, which is the physical environment. The missing ingredient is toxics in the environment.

Read the original:
Toxic Exposure: Chemicals Are in Our Water, Food, Air and Furniture - University of California

Reproductive system – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The reproductive system or genital system is a system of sex organs within an organism which work together for the purpose of sexual reproduction. Many non-living substances such as fluids, hormones, and pheromones are also important accessories to the reproductive system.[1] Unlike most organ systems, the sexes of differentiated species often have significant differences. These differences allow for a combination of genetic material between two individuals, which allows for the possibility of greater genetic fitness of the offspring.[2]

Among all living organisms, flowers, which are the reproductive structures of angiosperms, are the most varied physically and show a correspondingly great diversity in methods of reproduction.[3] Plants that are not flowering plants (green algae, mosses, liverworts, hornworts, ferns and gymnosperms such as conifers) also have complex interplays between morphological adaptation and environmental factors in their sexual reproduction. The breeding system, or how the sperm from one plant fertilizes the ovum of another, depends on the reproductive morphology, and is the single most important determinant of the genetic structure of nonclonal plant populations. Christian Konrad Sprengel (1793) studied the reproduction of flowering plants and for the first time it was understood that the pollination process involved both biotic and abiotic interactions.

Fungal reproduction is complex, reflecting the differences in lifestyles and genetic makeup within this diverse kingdom of organisms.[4]

In mammals, the major organs of the reproductive system include the external genitalia (penis and vulva) as well as a number of internal organs including the gamete producing gonads (testicles and ovaries). Diseases of the human reproductive system are very common and widespread, particularly communicable sexually transmitted diseases.[5]

Most other vertebrate animals have generally similar reproductive systems consisting of gonads, ducts, and openings. However, there is a great diversity of physical adaptations as well as reproductive strategies in every group of vertebrates.

Vertebrate animals all share key elements of their reproductive systems. They all have gamete-producing organs or gonads. In females, these gonads are then connected by oviducts to an opening to the outside of the body, typically the cloaca, but sometimes to a unique pore such as a vagina or intromittent organ.

The human reproductive system usually involves internal fertilization by sexual intercourse. During this process, the male inserts his erect penis into the female's vagina and ejaculates semen, which contains sperm. The sperm then travels through the vagina and cervix into the uterus or fallopian tubes for fertilization of the ovum. Upon successful fertilization and implantation, gestation of the fetus then occurs within the female's uterus for approximately nine months, this process is known as pregnancy in humans. Gestation ends with birth, the process of birth is known as labor. Labor consists of the muscles of the uterus contracting, the cervix dilating, and the baby passing out the vagina (the female genital organ). Human's babies and children are nearly helpless and require high levels of parental care for many years. One important type of parental care is the use of the mammary glands in the female breasts to nurse the baby.[6]

The female reproductive system has two functions: The first is to produce egg cells, and the second is to protect and nourish the offspring until birth. The male reproductive system has one function, and it is to produce and deposit sperm. Humans have a high level of sexual differentiation. In addition to differences in nearly every reproductive organ, numerous differences typically occur in secondary sexual characteristics.

The male reproductive system is a series of organs located outside of the body and around the pelvis region of a male that contribute towards the reproduction process. The primary direct function of the male reproductive system is to provide the male sperm for fertilization of the ovum.

The major reproductive organs of the male can be grouped into three categories. The first category is sperm production and storage. Production takes place in the testes which are housed in the temperature regulating scrotum, immature sperm then travel to the epididymis for development and storage. The second category are the ejaculatory fluid producing glands which include the seminal vesicles, prostate, and the vas deferens. The final category are those used for copulation, and deposition of the spermatozoa (sperm) within the male, these include the penis, urethra, vas deferens, and Cowper's gland.

Major secondary sexual characteristics includes: larger, more muscular stature, deepened voice, facial and body hair, broad shoulders, and development of an adam's apple. An important sexual hormone of males is androgen, and particularly testosterone.

The testes release a hormone that controls the development of sperm. This hormone is also responsible for the development of physical characteristics in men such as facial hair and a deep voice.

The human female reproductive system is a series of organs primarily located inside of the body and around the pelvic region of a female that contribute towards the reproductive process. The human female reproductive system contains three main parts: the vagina, which leads from the vulva, the vaginal opening, to the uterus; the uterus, which holds the developing fetus; and the ovaries, which produce the female's ova. The breasts are involved during the parenting stage of reproduction, but in most classifications they are not considered to be part of the female reproductive system.

The vagina meets the outside at the vulva, which also includes the labia, clitoris and urethra; during intercourse this area is lubricated by mucus secreted by the Bartholin's glands. The vagina is attached to the uterus through the cervix, while the uterus is attached to the ovaries via the fallopian tubes. Each ovary contains hundreds of egg cells or ova (singular ovum).

Approximately every 28 days, the pituitary gland releases a hormone that stimulates some of the ova to develop and grow. One ovum is released and it passes through the fallopian tube into the uterus. Hormones produced by the ovaries prepare the uterus to receive the ovum. The lining of the uterus, called the endometrium, and unfertilized ova are shed each cycle through the process of menstruation. If the ovum is fertilized by sperm, it attaches to the endometrium and the fetus develops.

Most mammal reproductive systems are similar, however, there are some notable differences between the "normal" mammal and humans. For instance, most mammalian males have a penis which is stored internally until erect, and most have a penis bone or baculum. Additionally, males of most species do not remain continually sexually fertile as humans do. Like humans, most groups of mammals have descended testicles found within a scrotum, however, others have descended testicles that rest on the ventral body wall, and a few groups of mammals, such as elephants, have undescended testicles found deep within their body cavities near their kidneys.[7]

The reproductive system of marsupials is unique in that the female has two vaginae, both of which open externally through one orifice but lead to different compartments within the uterus; males usually have a two-pronged penis which corresponds to the females' two vaginae. Marsupials typically develop their offspring in an external pouch containing teats to which their newborn young (joeys) attach themselves for post uterine development. Also, marsupials have a unique prepenial scrotum.[8] The 15mm (5/8 in) long newborn joey instinctively crawls and wriggles the several inches (15cm), while clinging to fur, on the way to its mother's pouch.

The uterus and vagina are unique to mammals with no homologue in birds, reptiles, amphibians, or fish.[citation needed] In place of the uterus the other vertebrate groups have an unmodified oviduct leading directly to a cloaca, which is a shared exit-hole for gametes, urine, and feces. Monotremes (i.e. platypus and echidnas), a group of egg-laying mammals, also lack a uterus and vagina, and in that respect have a reproductive system resembling that of a reptile.

In domestic canines, sexual maturity (puberty) occurs between the ages of 6 to 12 months for both males and females, although this can be delayed until up to two years of age for some large breeds.

The mare's reproductive system is responsible for controlling gestation, birth, and lactation, as well as her estrous cycle and mating behavior. The stallion's reproductive system is responsible for his sexual behavior and secondary sex characteristics (such as a large crest).

Male and female birds have a cloaca, an opening through which eggs, sperm, and wastes pass. Intercourse is performed by pressing the lips of the cloacae together, which is sometimes knowna intromittent organ which is known as a phallus that is analogous to the mammals' penis. The female lays amniotic eggs in which the young fetus continues to develop after it leaves the female's body. Unlike most vertebrates female birds typically have only one functional ovary and oviduct.[9] As a group, birds, like mammals, are noted for their high level of parental care.

Reptiles are almost all sexually dimorphic, and exhibit internal fertilization through the cloaca. Some reptiles lay eggs while others are viviparous (animals that deliver live young). Reproductive organs are found within the cloaca of reptiles. Most male reptiles have copulatory organs, which are usually retracted or inverted and stored inside the body. In turtles and crocodilians, the male has a single median penis-like organ, while male snakes and lizards each possess a pair of penis-like organs.

Most amphibians exhibit external fertilization of eggs, typically within the water, though some amphibians such as caecilians have internal fertilization.[10] All have paired, internal gonads, connected by ducts to the cloaca.

Fish exhibit a wide range of different reproductive strategies. Most fish however are oviparous and exhibit external fertilization. In this process, females use their cloaca to release large quantities of their gametes, called spawn into the water and one or more males release "milt", a white fluid containing many sperm over the unfertilized eggs. Other species of fish are oviparous and have internal fertilization aided by pelvic or anal fins that are modified into an intromittent organ analogous to the human penis.[11] A small portion of fish species are either viviparous or ovoviviparous, and are collectively known as livebearers.[12]

Fish gonads are typically pairs of either ovaries or testes. Most fish are sexually dimorphic but some species are hermaphroditic or unisexual.[13]

Invertebrates have an extremely diverse array of reproductive systems, the only commonality may be that they all lay eggs. Also, aside from cephalopods, and arthropods, nearly all other invertebrates are hermaphroditic and exhibit external fertilization.

All cephalopods are sexually dimorphic and reproduce by laying eggs. Most cephalopods have semi-internal fertilization, in which the male places his gametes inside the female's mantle cavity or pallial cavity to fertilize the ova found in the female's single ovary.[14] Likewise, male cephalopods have only a single testicle. In the female of most cephalopods the nidamental glands aid in development of the egg.

The "penis" in most unshelled male cephalopods (Coleoidea) is a long and muscular end of the gonoduct used to transfer spermatophores to a modified arm called a hectocotylus. That in turn is used to transfer the spermatophores to the female. In species where the hectocotylus is missing, the "penis" is long and able to extend beyond the mantle cavity and transfer the spermatophores directly to the female.

Most insects reproduce oviparously, i.e. by laying eggs. The eggs are produced by the female in a pair of ovaries. Sperm, produced by the male in one testis or more commonly two, is transmitted to the female during mating by means of external genitalia. The sperm is stored within the female in one or more spermathecae. At the time of fertilization, the eggs travel along oviducts to be fertilized by the sperm and are then expelled from the body ("laid"), in most cases via an ovipositor.

The rest is here:
Reproductive system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia