Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm looking for perspectives from people who have done IVF with genetic testing: did you select the sex of your embryos for transfer?
We are doing genetic testing for age reasons and will be able to find out the sex. The sex has never been that important to me. In fact, part of me is tempted to merely ask the doctor to place the best-looking embryo. In the event we are able to have two children, perhaps my ideal would be one of each. But this journey to even getting pregnant has been so difficult I am not going to tempt fate at this point.
Did you choose? Leave it to the embryologist? What went into your decision? Anything that you regretted later? Thanks.
We did full genetic testing, including the sex, and transferred the sex we wanted. If you have PGS results, looks don't come into play.
Aren’t they still graded and therefore ranked?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm looking for perspectives from people who have done IVF with genetic testing: did you select the sex of your embryos for transfer?
We are doing genetic testing for age reasons and will be able to find out the sex. The sex has never been that important to me. In fact, part of me is tempted to merely ask the doctor to place the best-looking embryo. In the event we are able to have two children, perhaps my ideal would be one of each. But this journey to even getting pregnant has been so difficult I am not going to tempt fate at this point.
Did you choose? Leave it to the embryologist? What went into your decision? Anything that you regretted later? Thanks.
We did full genetic testing, including the sex, and transferred the sex we wanted. If you have PGS results, looks don't come into play.
Anonymous wrote:I'm looking for perspectives from people who have done IVF with genetic testing: did you select the sex of your embryos for transfer?
We are doing genetic testing for age reasons and will be able to find out the sex. The sex has never been that important to me. In fact, part of me is tempted to merely ask the doctor to place the best-looking embryo. In the event we are able to have two children, perhaps my ideal would be one of each. But this journey to even getting pregnant has been so difficult I am not going to tempt fate at this point.
Did you choose? Leave it to the embryologist? What went into your decision? Anything that you regretted later? Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is unethical to allow choice. They should automatically use the best looking embryo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom of a boy #1 and girl #2 here, I would pick a girl if you ever want to feel like having another child. There are some crazy girl babies, but boys will run you ragged 100%.
This is ridiculous and not helpful towards OPs question. Signed, mother of an extremely calm, easy 6 year old boy who slept 12 hours through the night starting at 9 weeks and spends much of the day quietly reading.
Personally, I needed a VERY large gap. Most of my friends with boys were the same. Obviously I don't know you, but not a single friend with a boy had an easy go of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Timely question. We don’t know the gender, but we have 5 normals that all day 5 and have the same grade. We were all about not choosing, but now it’s a bit weird that someone else will choose and it won’t be based on quality, since they are all the same. We asked the clinic how they would choose and we are waiting to hear back.
Although honestly I don’t really have a gender preference so we will probably just make them pick.
OP here. Same thoughts. (Although I don't have results back so this might be a totally moot issue overall.) I didn't like the idea of choosing but the idea of another human doing the choosing seems off to me. If the clinic responds to your question, I'd be curious to know.
Thanks for the thoughtful responses.
Anonymous wrote:My embryos were heavily skewed towards one sex, like I had four of one sex and one of the other. For my first transfer I chose the sex that I had the most of, that way, if it did not take, I wouldn’t feel like I lost my only chance for the sex I only had one of. I was worried it being my first transfer I may find some other infertility issue related to implantation during the process that led to failure. Does that make sense? I want more than one and ideally different genders, so that factored into my decision as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom of a boy #1 and girl #2 here, I would pick a girl if you ever want to feel like having another child. There are some crazy girl babies, but boys will run you ragged 100%.
This is ridiculous and not helpful towards OPs question. Signed, mother of an extremely calm, easy 6 year old boy who slept 12 hours through the night starting at 9 weeks and spends much of the day quietly reading.

Anonymous wrote:Timely question. We don’t know the gender, but we have 5 normals that all day 5 and have the same grade. We were all about not choosing, but now it’s a bit weird that someone else will choose and it won’t be based on quality, since they are all the same. We asked the clinic how they would choose and we are waiting to hear back.
Although honestly I don’t really have a gender preference so we will probably just make them pick.