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Research at Sheba Medical Center: Corona vaccine does not affect fertility Israel today

2021-12-25T21:44:42.625Z


The concern of millions of women in Israel has been dispelled • A first-of-its-kind study conducted at Sheba Hospital found that there was no decrease in the level of the hormone associated with fertility and ovarian function after receiving the vaccine


A unique study at Sheba Medical Center found that the corona vaccine has no effect on ovarian function and female fertility.

This is the first study of its kind in the world, which provides an answer to an issue that has troubled many women around the world regarding the effect of the corona vaccine on fertility.

The study also addresses Pike News on the subject, including the claim that one of the proteins in the vaccine binds to the ovaries and affects their function.

The study examined the level of the hormone AMH (an anti-molar hormone, the level of which indicates the ovarian reserve) among about 200 women of childbearing age, of whom 129 completed all stages of the study.

The women were tested before receiving the first dose of the vaccine and three months later, during which time they also received the second dose of the vaccine.

Vaccines against corona, Photo: EP

The study found that the vaccine had no adverse effect on ovarian function, and there was no difference in hormone levels before the first vaccine and the second and after three months after the first vaccine, also in surgery according to different age groups.

There is now a follow-up study on adolescents and girls aged 18-12 and a follow-up follow-up of the women from the first study, after receiving a third vaccine.

The study was published in the prestigious journal "Human Reproduction" and was conducted in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology in Sheba, initiated and led by Dr. Aya Mor-Sasson, and Prof. Yaron Rabinovich, Deputy Director, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

The vaccine does not affect fertility, Photo: Coco

Prof. Rabinovich: "One of the concerns raised since the advent of the corona vaccine was that it could cause infertility. The study shows that the vaccine does not affect a woman's fertility level. As for the future, we know that vaccine side effects are short-term and not long-term. ".

Meanwhile, the journalist duo Orly Vilnai and Guy Maroz caused a stir on Facebook on this very topic on Friday: they shared a link to a post calling for women who they thought had a quiet birth as a result of the Corona vaccine to share their story.

Surfers on the duo's Facebook page reacted, for the most part, angrily. 

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Source: israelhayom

All life articles on 2021-12-25

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