Surrogacy and IVF

  Your journey begins with knowledge:

Fertility Facts Number of women who  experience infertility- 7.3 million or  12 % of all women of reproductive age read more

Do I need Surrogate? In general, when the couple ( or single parent) decide to use gestational carrier and donor's egg, the success rate is highest possible read more 

Do I need Egg Donor? It is pretty common that couples and individuals begin looking into Assisted Reproduction when they went through a number of failed IVF cycles. read more

Surrogacy Success Rate In some cases a women has trouble to conceive via IVF due to unknown implantation problems.read more

 

Ovarian Reserve Female age is very important in consideration of probability for conception because it is very much related to egg quality.  read more

IVF in Photos View the entire IVF process  read more

IVF Success Rate IVF success rate depends on age.  Currently, for women under 35, IVF success rate  is about 41%. read more


Italian, Spanish, French, German

Surrogacy Italian Surrogacy SpanishSurrogacy FrenchSurrogacy GermanNew Surrogates DailyThumbnail Example

Welcome to Surrogacy Agency NY               Offices in New York  and in Philadelphia

Our surrogacy agency will  find a surrogate for you from around the country.  We match the Intended Parents with Surrogates from the states where surrogacy is legal and Pre-Birth Orders are issued.  We offer services in two locations: in New York City and in Philadelphia.  We conduct free over the phone consultations for the Intended Parents.  We work with married couples, gay couples, and single intended parents from the United States and Internationally.  Review  French, Spanish, Italian, and German versions of our site.  
Call us at 1-718-702-8852,  9 am-7 pm Eastern Standard time.  For new Surrogates, follow us on 
Twitter.

Preparation for ICSI
Intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) is a relatively new but well-established procedure first performed in 1992. The procedure was developed to help male factor infertility. The procedure involves injecting a single sperm into the cytoplasm of each egg using a fine glass needle. The first ICSI baby was reported in 1992.
ICSI (inro-cytoplasmic sperm injection)
For whom ICSI is advised?
- Couples who have failed to achieve fertilization or had very poor fertilization following IVF
- Men with abnormal sperm parameters (e.g. low count, poor motility)
- Azoospermic (complete absence of sperm )
- When frozen sperm is limited in number and quality.
Inseminated Oocyte
About two hours before the eggs are retrieved, a semen sample is collected. Approximately 50,000 sperm are placed with each egg in the incubator where they will hopefully form an embryo. When only a few sperm are available, Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) may be attempted.
Normally Fertilized Oocyte
Your developing embryos will be monitored carefully by an embryologist. After 18 hours of development, your embryologist will make the first check on your embryos. By this stage, your embryos will still be single cells. However, they will contain two clear bubbles (known as pronuclei) inside. These pronuclei are evidence that the embryo contains genetic material from both you and your male partner. Embryos without pronuclei are discarded.
Blastomers
Two Days: Embryos that are cultured for two days are generally transferred at the two or four-cell stage. The quality of embryos is very unclear; transfer is not recommended.
Three Days: Embryos that are cultured for three days are usually transferred at the six to eight cell stage. Embryos are checked by the embryologist for gene activation and cleavage prior to transfer; normally the best quality embryos are transfered fresh.
Blastocyst
Five days: A blastocyst is an embryo that has developed for five to seven days after fertilization. At this point the embryo has two different cell types and a central cavity. The surface cells, will become the placenta, and the inner cells, will become the fetus.
Hatched Blastocyst
A healthy blastocyst should begin hatching from its outer shell, called the zona pellucida by the end of the sixth day. Within about 24 hours after hatching, it should begin to implant into the lining of the mother's uterus.



HOME|Intended Parents| Our ProcessSurrogate Cost|Egg Donor Cost| Agency CostContact 

Copyright (©) Surrogacy International, 2006. Valid XHTML, Valid CSS