In Vitro Fertilization
Relevant information about In Vitro Fertilization.In Vitro Fertilization consists in making it possible for the oocyte and the sperm to join outside of the female body in ideal conditions generated in a laboratory that allow an optimum follow up of the process. Finally hope is arising. Reach your lifelong desire.
Even though In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) was originally developed for helping women who have the Fallopian tubes obstructed achieve pregnancy, nowadays it is also indicated in the following cases:
In vitro fertilization was carried out for the first time in 1978 and is the procedure from which the rest of the assisted fertilization treatments evolved. Since then and thanks to its implementation, thousands of healthy babies were born. Its creators based their research on the fact that for a pregnancy to take place it is not enough for the oocytes and the sperm to be normal, it is essential for all the conditions to be adequate for the 'union' to take place normally. This 'union' is, precisely, what is known as fertilization and, many times, it is because of obstructions of the Fallopian tubes or other factors that prevent this union from happening that pregnancies fail. In vitro fertilization consists in making it possible for the oocyte and the sperm to join outside of the female body in ideal conditions generated in a laboratory that allow an optimum follow up of the process. Around the 14th day of the menstrual cycle, one or more oocytes are collected and placed in a glass dish (vitro means glass in Latin) together with a sufficient amount of sperms that move about by themselves in the same way that they do in women's wombs. This way, each of the treated oocytes has the faculty of being penetrated by a spermatozoid. These unions will produce one or more embryos that will be transferred to the uterus by means of a catheter; this procedure is very simple and not cruel at all. Thanks to this technique, some couples with low chances of achieving a natural pregnancy, with no more than 1% of probabilities, may raise their chances up to 25% for each attempt. This places them at the same level of those who do not have any reproductive disorders, whose chances for achieving a natural pregnancy are between 20% and 30% for each attempt. The chances for success are cumulative, so that an in vitro fertilization treatment that consists of four successive attempts may raise the chances up to 70%. The most important factors that determine the chances for a successful pregnancy are the woman' s age, the quality of the collected oocytes, the quality of the sperm, the causes of the infertility and the number of embryos transferred.
The pregnancies achieved thanks to assisted reproduction techniques are not different from natural pregnancies. Thousands of couples have been benefited by these techniques and today are very proud and happy parents.
Even though in vitro fertilization is a low-risk procedure, we should take into account that some of the following complications may occur:
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