What is Micromanipulation?
Micromanipulation
is a sophisticated laboratory technique to enhance the likelihood
of success with in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer.
In general it is used for two reasons: "assisted hatching"
to help fertilized eggs implant or "assisted fertilization"
to help sperm penetrate eggs. The reason older women have
trouble conceiving is that the protective shell around the
egg thickens after fertilization. This prevents the embryo
from "hatching" out of its shell. By using microscopic
instruments in the laboratory, this shell can be thinned and
openings made so that hatching will occur more readily.
Assisted fertilization is used for cases of severe male factor
infertility associated with very low sperm counts, or sperm
counts with very low proportions of moving sperm cells. Sperm
cells may be injected directly into the egg itself by a process
known as
intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Alternatively,
sperm cells may be placed just inside the protective shell
surrounding the egg to facilitate fertilization.
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