the act of sowing (of seeds in the ground or, figuratively, of germs in the body or ideas in the mind, etc.)
<noun.act>
the introduction of semen into the genital tract of a female
<noun.act>
Insemination \In*sem`i*na"tion\, n. A sowing. [Obs.]
Unmarried women also request artificial insemination, the report said.
Men with the AIDS virus have AIDS-free sperm, raising the possibility that infected males may be able to father children through artificial insemination without passing the disease to the fetus, researchers say.
An Oregon woman who does not want to share parenting rights with the California man who donated his sperm for her artificial insemination lost a Supreme Court appeal today.
Qingqing conceived the twins through artificial insemination using frozen semen, the report said.
"Women who choose to undergo artificial insemination should not be subjected to unnecessary risks for serious and even fatal illnesses," Gardineer said.
The study said that about 65,000 babies conceived by artificial insemination were born in the United States last year.
He was there 10 to 12 hours a day, dancing with Ramsar when she was in the mood until she was ready for artificial insemination.
The CDC has received reports of at least two other couples who have tried artificial insemination despite one spouse's infection. One attempt resulted in pregnancy, and the other did not; no infection has been detected yet in the non-infected spouse.
The judge recommended in November that U.S. District Judge William R. Collison rule that the bureau's lack of a policy on artificial insemination isn't a constitutionally sufficient reason to prohibit the procedure.
He fled to a New England farm where he encountered just what you'd expect: snows, busted plumbing, recalcitrant pigs, bone-wearing labor and a cow who needed his ministrations for artificial insemination.
A giant panda that was born via artificial insemination has given birth to twins conceived through the same method, according to an official report.
If the judge agrees, a woman who was artificially inseminated could keep the money and the baby, and the man whose sperm was used in the insemination would have to fight for custody of the child.
One was Blup, the other was artificial insemination,' says Dr Webb.
The lawsuit arises at a time when lesbian partners increasingly are arranging to have children, either by adoption or artificial insemination.
Today, women can and do have children using sperm from artificial insemination.