Test
Tube Babies - IVF & GIFT
from the book How to Have
a Baby: Overcoming Infertility
by Dr. Aniruddha Malpani, MD
and Dr. Anjali Malpani, MD.
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of contents ·
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Egg
Retrieval
Egg collection
is accomplished today by ultrasound-guided aspiration. This is a minor
surgical procedure that can be done even under intravenous sedation.
The ultrasound probe is inserted through the vagina. The probe emits
high-frequency sound waves which are translated into images of the
pelvic organs and displayed on a monitor , so that the mature follicles
can be seen as black bubbles on the screen. The doctor guides a needle
through the vagina into each mature follicle. The follicular fluid
containing the egg is then sucked out through the needle into a test
tube, and all the follicles are aspirated, one by one. This is a very
precise procedure, which requires considerable skill, and takes about
10-40 minutes to perform, depending upon the number of eggs. On an
average , we retrieve about 4-16 eggs for each patient. If there are
few eggs, many doctors will flush each follicle, to ensure that each
egg is retrieved.
The older
method of performing egg retrieval involved a laparoscopy, and the
eggs and follicular fluid were aspirated under direct vision. However,
this method is rarely used today, because the vaginal-ultrasound guided
method is much quicker, easier and safer.

Fig
1. Schematic of egg collection under vaginal ultrasound guidance
Insemination,
Fertilization, and Embryo Culture
The aspirated
follicular fluid is then immediately carried into the laboratory (
which is adjoining the operation theater ) where it is examined by
the embryologist under a stereozoom microscope, in order to identify
the egg. Each egg is surrounded by sticky cumulus cells, and is called
an oocyte-cumulus complex. These are washed in medium, graded for
their maturity and then transferred into the CO2 incubator The maturity
of an egg determines when the sperm will be added to it (insemination).
Insemination can be done immediately upon harvest, but is usually
done after 2-6 hours.

Fig
1. Checking the eggs under the stereozoom microscope in the IVF lab

Fig
2. Mature oocyte cumulus complex, as seen under a stereozoom microscope
in the IVF lab, during egg retrieval. The egg is in the center, surrounded
by the cumulus cells.
On the
day the eggs are harvested, the husband provides a semen sample. The
sperm are separated from the seminal plasma in a process known as
washing the sperm, and these washed sperm are used to inseminate the
eggs. Some men may have considerable difficulty producing a semen
sample at the appropriate time, because of the tremendous stress they
are under, and the " pressure to perform". For these men, using a
previously stored frozen sample can be helpful. Viagra ( sildenafil
citrate) can also be used to help them to get an erection, as can
using a vibrator.
A defined
number of sperm ( usually 100,000 sperm/ ml) is placed with each egg
in a separate dish containing IVF culture medium. The dishes are placed
in a CO2 incubator with a controlled temperature that is the same
as the woman's body - 37 C. The conditions in the incubator and the
culture medium are designed to mimic the conditions in the fallopian
tube, so that the embryos can grow happily in vitro. The culture medium
, which has to be very pure, contains various ingredients such as
protein, salts, buffer and antibiotics which allow optimal growth
of the embryo – think of it as "chicken soup for the embryo " !

Fig
3. A view of the incubator - the heart of an IVF lab.
About
18 hours after insemination, the embryologist checks to see how many
eggs have fertilized. This is called a pronuclear check, and normally
fertilized embryos at this time are single cell , with 2 pronuclei.
The pronucleus appears as a clear bubble within the embryo, and the
male pronucleus represents the genetic contribution of the husband
, while the female pronucleus represents the contribution of the wife.
When these fuse, a new life, with a unique genetic composition is
formed. Abnormally fertilized embryos ( for example, those with three
pronuclei), or those which have failed to fertilise, are discarded,
or used for research.

Fig
4. A normal 2-PN embryo on Day 1. This is a good quality embryo, because
the two pronuclei ( the clear bubbles in the center) are touching
each other; and the pronucleoli they contain are aligned properly.

Fig
5. A beautiful 8-cell embryo on Day 3. This is a Grade A embryo, with
regular , equally sized , clear blastomeres; and no fragments
There
is quite a lot of suspense and anxiety till you find out from the
lab how many embryos have fertilized. This is a biologic variable
which we still cannot control. Sometimes, even though the eggs and
sperm may look excellent , there may be a total failure of fertilization.
This can be a major blow, because it means that there are no embryos
to transfer. Poor fertilization rates may be because of : poor lab
conditions; a sperm problem, or an egg problem. If only one patient
has poor fertilization on a particular day, in a good lab, then it’s
usually the sperm which are held to be responsible .
The normally
fertilized embryos are left in culture, where they continue to divide,
and their quality graded after another 24 hours. Good quality embryos
divide rapidly; and healthy embryos have 2-4 cells, of equal size,
with clear cytoplasm and few fragments. The IVF lab is the heart of
the IVF clinic today, and an IVF clinic is only as good as its lab
! Unfortunately, most patients have no idea of what happens in the
lab, and they rarely get a chance to talk with the embryologist, the
skilled biologist who works in the IVF lab. The embryologist is the
unsung hero of IVF treatment who does all the important work behind
the scenes. The dramatic improvements in pregnancy rates with IVF
today are because of the important contributions embryologists have
made to finding the best ways of growing and culturing embryos in
vitro.
Many
patients are worried that their eggs, sperms or embryos may get mixed
up with someone else’s. While this can happen, the probability of
it happening in a well-run laboratory is very low, because good labs
have quality control mechanisms to prevent such mixups from occurring.
After
48 – 72 hours, when embryos usually consist of two to eight cells
each, they are ready to be placed into the woman's uterus. This procedure
is known as embryo transfer.
Embryo
Transfer
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