ICSI is a treatment for infertility in which a single sperm is injected directly into an egg to help it fertilise. It's used when IVF fails.
With ICSI, infertility can be conquered, one egg at a time.
ICSI involves injecting a single sperm into an egg to fertilise it. When conventional IVF techniques have failed or when sperm quality is poor, it is used.
Lower sperm count, also known as oligospermia, is a condition in which the amount of sperm in a man’s semen is beneath the normal range.
ICSI is used when IVF fails or male factor infertility is present.
The success rate depends on the woman’s age, health, and infertility. ICSI success is 45–50%.
ICSI is used with IVF to fertilise.
ICSI is a safe, common fertility treatment with few side effects.
From egg retrieval to embryo transfer, ICSI takes 4-6 weeks.
Traditional IVF transfers the fertilised egg to the woman’s uterus after monitoring it for a few days. A pregnancy test is done 12-14 days after the transfer to confirm conception.
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