Quantcast
breaking news

Smart Woman: Genetic Testing Advancements

By: Maxine Ridling
Updated: June 11, 2012
watch video
Ultrasounds can tell expectant parents a lot: How the big the baby is, how the pregnancy is progressing, whether it's a boy or a girl, but now researchers say a new test has been developed that would reveal the entire genetic blueprint of a fetus still in its mother womb.

It's done by taking a blood test from the mother and a saliva test from the father.
Existing tests like the amniocentesis can detest chromosome abnormalities like down syndrome, but this new breakthrough testing can detect more than 3,000 diseases, highlighting genetic mutations in a baby's genome code, such as if a child is predisposed to cancer.

Jay Shendure, an associate professor of genome sciences at the University of Washington heads up the research team developing the new procedure, which if used now would be costly. Shendure says as much as $50,000 for each test. It raises a host of ethical questions, will it lead to positive selection: Parents seeking certain traits in their unborn babies.

Some of the mutations are definitive -- that is, a child will be born with a disability -- but other mutations are less certain.

The genome map indicates only that a fetus has a greater likelihood of developing a disorder.
But researchers like Shendure say the implications are immense.

If doctors know ahead of time a child will develop a certain medical condition, it can lead to early intervention.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

A new device is helping patients lower their medication-resistant blood pressure....

As many as three tornadoes hit Young County, Texas on Friday evening....

Crime Stoppers is offering a $500.00 reward for information that leads to her arrest, through 05/22/13....

Mike Benning, a Massachusetts man, has become the first person in the country to have the i-Limb, the newest bionic hand on the market....

A recent Consumer Reports survey of more than 1,600 adult smartphone users found nearly 40 percent don't bother to take the minimal steps to secure them with simple password protection. Experts...

A 5-year-old North Carolina boy says his superhero nickname would be "Caleb Batman" after he helped his mother when she had a seizure while driving....

Two Michigan high schoolers are upset after the school made them retake yearbook photos to hide their pregnancy. ...

They're calling it the next oil boom....

While the Cline Shale oil region of West Texas does not include Taylor County, local leaders believe Abilene will still feel the economic impact....

The first official launch of drones in eastern Oregon took place on Tuesday....

 
Find Articles Here
 
      Page 5 of 642
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com