In Vitro Fertilization (IVF)
In
vitro fertilization, or IVF, is a procedure
that involves retrieving eggs and sperm from the bodies of the male and
female partners and placing them together in a laboratory dish to
enhance fertilization. Fertilized eggs are then transferred several days
later into the female partner's uterus where implantation and embryo
development will hopefully occur as in a normal pregnancy. IVF
is performed by physicians who specialize in reproductive medicine and
have received additional education and training in the evaluation and
treatment of
male and female infertility.
IVF was originally developed in the early 1970s to
treat
infertility
caused by blocked or damaged fallopian tubes. By 1978, the first
IVF
baby, Louise Brown, was born in the United Kingdom. Since then, the
number of IVF procedures performed each year has
increased and the
success rate has improved
significantly.
IVF involves several different treatment stages:
Stage One: Ovarian Stimulation and Monitoring: In
order to maximize the patient's chances for successful fertilization, a
patient undergoing IVF usually take hormones in the
form of injections to increase the number of eggs produced in a given
month. Monitoring is performed to continuously follow a woman's ovarian
response, allowing the physician to adjust and time medication dosage
appropriately.
Stage Two: Egg Retrieval: With the patient sedated
and comfortable, the eggs are retrieved through the vagina under
ultrasound guidance.
Stage Three: Culture and Fertilization: The eggs are
fertilized with sperm from the male partner. At times, the sperm are put
down on top of the egg. In other cases, especially when there are less
than one million living sperm, ICSI or
intracytoplasmic sperm injection is used catch a single sperm and inject
it directly into the egg.
Stage Four: Embryo Transfer: Either three or four of
the best embryos are transferred directly into the uterus and allowed to
implant. The remaining healthy embryos may be
cryopreserved (frozen) The
pregnancy test is performed 11 days after embryo transfer. In a good
program with a high quality laboratory, a woman under the age of 40
should become pregnant approximately 50% of the time.
An Exclusive Look Inside RMA of New York's IVF
Laboratory
RMA of New York recently released an extensive rare view into fertilization,
embryo development, and laboratory procedures performed during an IVF cycle.
Medical and laboratory video footage documents egg retrieval, insemination,
embryo development from cleavage stage (day 2-3) to blastocyst stage (day 5-6),
intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), assisted hatching, embryo transfer and
embryo cryopreservation.
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