Anonymous wrote:PGS testing is now different and better from what it was 2 years ago. Ask your clinic.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, OP, one can certainly do this. But PP is not completely right to say it's "totally irrelevant." At my clinic I was told that if you want to do PGS you have to do ICSI because if you don't, there's a chance that genetic material from a different sperm that was in the dish with the egg will contaminate the ultimate embryo. So PGS without having done ICSI would still be highly accurate, but not quite as reliable as otherwise - I don't know the percentages. PGS under any circumstance is not a guarantee of genetic normalcy though.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - many thanks for the helpful replies.
PP 17:34, that's what my clinic told me as well. We did PGS testing with our second fresh cycle with ICSI and got two normals, but neither took (got two chemicals) so my experience would corroborate that it can't be a guarantee of normalcy. We didn't bother with ICSI or PGS for cost reasons on our third round, but I was wondering whether we still have that PGS option open to us.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, OP, one can certainly do this. But PP is not completely right to say it's "totally irrelevant." At my clinic I was told that if you want to do PGS you have to do ICSI because if you don't, there's a chance that genetic material from a different sperm that was in the dish with the egg will contaminate the ultimate embryo. So PGS without having done ICSI would still be highly accurate, but not quite as reliable as otherwise - I don't know the percentages. PGS under any circumstance is not a guarantee of genetic normalcy though.