Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My re said it wasn’t even worth it without doing icsi.
Icsi is only recommended if there are sperm issues. My RE did not recommend it for us
Anonymous wrote:Not all clinics will transfer embryos that came back w bad results like mosaicism. Know what your clinic does before testing. They may refuse to transfer or you might have agreed to discard in the paperwork.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The team at CCRM really emphasizes the quality of their lab, saying that their procedures, embryologists, and equipment are best-in-class, increasing the accuracy of testing. Which I didn't disagree with, and if I ended all my retrieval cycles with tons of embryos, I'd have tested them. But I didn't, and since the guidance over 40 is to transfer 2-3 embryos at a time, it seemed like the better option. You can't get pregnant if you don't put any embryos in, so at least I was giving myself a chance.
Were you able to get pregnant with those 3 embryos?
We had a very long journey. All together, we tested 4 embryos (across 4 retrievals, one retrieval didn't have any embryos make it to day 6), and then stopped testing and transferred a total of 9 embryos across 4 different transfers (2--this resulted in a miscarriage, 3, 3, 1). Only one was considered poorly graded (the last transfer) and I think it was a BB. I consistently made 1-3 highly graded embryos every time (except once), nothing normal and nothing stuck. We ended up using DE, after really struggling with whether that was the right decision for us, and ultimately, it was. We had a single embryo, did one transfer and had a healthy, uneventful pregnancy at 42/43.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The statistics of success with your own eggs at 42 are poor. Start asking questions about donor eggs. (I’m not trying to be unkind, just realistic.)
You shouldn’t just randomly mention donor eggs! It is a HUGE decision on a very complicated and complex topic and it isn’t a solution for many many people due to their beliefs and principles! OP is interested in Own Eggs, if she was interested in donor she would have written it !
Anonymous wrote:The statistics of success with your own eggs at 42 are poor. Start asking questions about donor eggs. (I’m not trying to be unkind, just realistic.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The team at CCRM really emphasizes the quality of their lab, saying that their procedures, embryologists, and equipment are best-in-class, increasing the accuracy of testing. Which I didn't disagree with, and if I ended all my retrieval cycles with tons of embryos, I'd have tested them. But I didn't, and since the guidance over 40 is to transfer 2-3 embryos at a time, it seemed like the better option. You can't get pregnant if you don't put any embryos in, so at least I was giving myself a chance.
Were you able to get pregnant with those 3 embryos?
Anonymous wrote:The team at CCRM really emphasizes the quality of their lab, saying that their procedures, embryologists, and equipment are best-in-class, increasing the accuracy of testing. Which I didn't disagree with, and if I ended all my retrieval cycles with tons of embryos, I'd have tested them. But I didn't, and since the guidance over 40 is to transfer 2-3 embryos at a time, it seemed like the better option. You can't get pregnant if you don't put any embryos in, so at least I was giving myself a chance.
Anonymous wrote:Different perspective than I've seen represented here: while trying for a second child, starting at 39, we tested the 1 or 2 embryos we got in the first 3 cycles, which seemed like a giant waste of time. Then we transferred untested embryos. I did end up having a miscarriage after one of those transfers, which landed me in the ER, but I wouldn't make a different choice, evening knowing that outcome. PGT is not reliable, b/c of the small number of cells that are being tested. So you are potentially discarding a normal embryo. And the best lab is your body, that actually does the work to sort out normal and abnormal embryos (hence miscarriages). I'm sure someone will come at me for all of this, but even at CCRM, with their amazing lab, my doc was still supportive of this choice.