Men with spinal cord injuries become fathers thanks to rare fertility treatment at Miami clinic

A spinal cord injury can be life-altering – and the potential for infertility is often a devastating blow as well.

Among men who experience spinal cord injuries (SCIs) in the U.S., nearly eight in 10 have fertility and reproduction issues due to erectile dysfunction or poor sperm quality.

But one clinic in Miami, Florida, is on a mission to help men with SCIs start a family.

STUDY SUGGESTS MEDITERRANEAN DIET COULD BOOST MALE FERTILITY

The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, part of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, has aided in the birth of 200 babies since the 1990s.

Fox News Digital spoke with Dr. Emad Ibrahim, director of the Male Fertility Research Program, about how "amazing" this achievement has been.

The doctor said "nothing beats the feeling" of finding out one of his patients is expecting a child.

MEN'S ENERGY AND VITALITY PLUMMETS FOR 6 REASONS

"Every time we get an email with an ultrasound picture that shows the baby … it's a mission accomplished," he said. "It’s the most gratifying sensation you'll ever have."

Ibrahim, an associate professor of urology and neurological surgery at UMiami, said the clinical research program is "very unique" in its quest to help men father their own children through techniques rarely found elsewhere.

While men with erectile dysfunction can be given medication to address this issue, men with ejaculatory dysfunction face a bigger challenge that the Miami clinic addresses through two unique procedures.

The two techniques include penile vibratory stimulation and electroejaculation, both FDA-approved and selected based on the nature of the spinal cord injury.

ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION MEDS LIKE VIAGRA LINKED TO REDUCED ALZHEIMER'S RISK, STUDY SUGGESTS

The electroejaculation machine activates and contracts the glands responsible for producing sperm. (The machine is also available in Sweden, its only other location besides Miami.)

This method is guaranteed to be successful "almost 100% of the time," according to Ibrahim.

Men from all over the U.S., and even outside the country, have come to seek this treatment — including Darris Straughter, 44, a Miami native.

For more Health articles, visit www.foxnews/health

Straughter was a victim of gun violence in 2018, he told Fox News Digital in an interview.

While sitting at a traffic light, he was shot eight times. The injuries left him paralyzed from the chest down.

"I don't feel anything," he said. "It's a crazy situation. You just have to roll with the punches and keep moving and try to stay positive."

Despite the incident, Straughter — who already had one child of his own — was determined to provide children for his wife.

FDA APPROVES FIRST AT-HOME STERILE INSEMINATION KIT TO HELP WITH INFERTILITY

"I kept saying, ‘She deserves a kid,’" he said. "She was by my side the whole time. So, I was like, ‘I’m going to try any way possible to make it happen.’"

Straughter received treatment from Ibrahim, which ultimately led to his wife's successful pregnancy. His daughter is now almost 2 years old and is "healthy and strong," he said.

"[Fatherhood] is amazing. It's so joyful," he said. "I just love everything about it."

Fellow Florida resident Eric Rosemary, 46, also found success at the Miami facility after a Memorial Day accident 15 years ago left him paralyzed.

OZEMPIC BABIES: WOMEN CLAIM WEIGHT-LOSS DRUGS ARE MAKING THEM MORE FERTILE AND EXPERTS AGREE

"I was on a boat … in West Palm Beach, and I fell off the boat and shattered my C4, C5, C6 vertebrae and became a quadriplegic," he said. 

Rosemary, who has been married for eight years, told Fox News Digital that he turned to the Miami Project when the timing was right to have kids.

Rosemary was previously involved in clinical trials with the project.

He and his wife have since had two sons, born in 2020 and 2023, after three attempts at the first pregnancy and two attempts with the second.

"When you first get injured, there are so many other things you have to worry about," Rosemary said.

SPINAL CORD TREATMENT RESTORES FUNCTION FOR PARALYZED PATIENTS IN STUDY

"In my 30s, I was able to cope with having a spinal cord injury, rebuilding my business, re-building my life, then getting married and having my boys," he continued. "I was fortunate enough that I had the time to do that." 

As patients who have suffered from an SCI mainly focus on mobility and medical care at first, sexual function is usually "brushed off," Ibrahim noted.

"They rarely talk about fertility," he said. "And unfortunately, we still have some rehab centers in remote areas in the country that will tell these patients, ‘Forget it. You're not going to have any children.’"

He added, "If [providers] knew that our program exists, and they could actually refer the patients to us, that would be of great help."

As the Miami Project’s procedures have shown excellent results, more research on a potential fertility treatment is underway, Ibrahim revealed.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

The program was awarded a $3.24 million, 40-year grant in July 2023 from the U.S. Department of Defense to conduct a clinical trial to study a drug called Probenecid, which was previously used to treat gout.

Through years of research, Ibrahim and his team found that this drug targets the internal issues that some SCI patients experience, he said.

In the pilot study, which included 18 patients with spinal cord injuries, Ibrahim reported that all participants saw improved sperm quality.

"The medication is safe, and we have the publication to support that it works," he said.

The larger clinical trial is currently ongoing as the Miami Project is in search of new volunteers.

House Republicans say they aren't sweating Kamala as possible Biden replacement

House Republicans are already sharpening their attacks against Vice President Kamala Harris as public discussions swell over whether she will replace President Biden at the top of Democrats' 2024 ticket.

GOP lawmakers — in both safe red seats and swing districts being targeted by the left — dismissed Harris as a political threat to their chances in November, arguing she's still tied to the same progressive Biden policies they believe are unpopular with voters.

Rep. Nick Langworthy, R-N.Y., who served as longtime chair of the New York Republican Party before coming to Congress, told Fox News Digital, "Kamala Harris is just as responsible for this administration's failures, but she's more incompetent."

"She will make no difference to the outcome. President Trump will be our 47th," he said.

BIDEN TELLS WHITE HOUSE AUDIENCE HE'S ‘NOT GOING ANYWHERE’ DURING FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION 

A swing-seat Republican who asked not to be named told Fox News Digital they were skeptical Harris would do better on the debate stage than Biden. 

"I would say she's the weakest part of the ticket right now, as bad as Biden is," that GOP lawmaker said.

"Whether it's Joe Biden or [Harris] at the top of the ticket, they'll have to defend their abysmal, tax-and-spend record," said Rep. Carlos Gimenez, R-Fla. "We're already seeing significant Republican advantages across the board in swing states, especially increase in support from Hispanic voters."

Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., a Trump ally from a deep red district, told Fox News Digital that Biden and Harris "both own the same disastrous policies."

It comes as conversations swirl around Harris as one of the most likely successors to Biden if he chooses to withdraw from the race ahead of his November rematch with former President Trump. 

WH AIDES, CAMPAIGN STAFF REPORTEDLY 'MISERABLE' AS PRESSURE BUILDS ON BIDEN TO DROP OUT

Biden and his campaign have insisted he will not bow out of the race, but his weak performance in last month's presidential debate has left many on the left wondering if he's the best positioned candidate to beat Trump. Multiple polls have shown Biden modestly trailing Trump since the debate aired.

Harris has maintained that she is standing by Biden on multiple occasions when asked about the speculation by reporters.

But if she were to take over, Harris would be the only Democratic candidate who could inherit the $240 million Biden-Harris campaign war chest.

The House GOP campaign arm, the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), is also aiming its fire at Harris as well, in a telling sign that it sees her as the next top Democratic target.

A new advertisement released by the NRCC this week cast Harris as Biden's "enabler-in-chief" and hits her for her role as Biden's "border czar." 

HOLLYWOOD MEGADONOR CALLS ON DEMS TO 'STOP GIVING' MONEY UNTIL BIDEN DROPS OUT

A spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) told Axios of the ad, "Republicans are fooling themselves if they think the American public will blame anyone besides Donald Trump and his feckless band of Republican extremists and phony moderates who killed a bipartisan border deal."

A recent CNN/SSRS poll shows Harris performing slightly better than Biden in a matchup against Trump.

But when asked about her impact on the November races, House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn. — a past NRCC chair — would not speak to the vice president specifically, though he was confident in the GOP's chances to secure the White House.

"It doesn't matter which incompetent failure Democrats have on the ballot in November — voters are ready to abandon the sinking ship that is the Biden-Harris administration," Emmer said.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Biden campaign and to Harris' office for comment.