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Learn about what's involved in fertility treatment
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Fertility treatments to help you achieve your dream
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No two patients have the exact same treatment but here we have provided an example patient journey to help illustrate what a straight-forward IVF cycle might look like cost-wise.
Understanding infertility will help you to make the most of your consultation.
Fertility is a highly complex process and infertility can be attributed to either male or female factors – or both.
Understanding infertility will help you to make the most of your consultation.
Fertility is a highly complex process and infertility can be attributed to either male or female factors – or both.
The male factor is responsible for around a third of all infertility cases.
A male must produce semen that contains sufficient numbers of healthy motile sperm, and have the ability to achieve erection and ejaculate semen into the vagina.
The sperm are produced by the testis, stored in the epididymis (the structure next to the testis in the scrotum) and transferred through the vas deferens to the urethra during ejaculation. It takes about 100 days for sperm to develop, during which time production may be affected by febrile illness, exposure to drugs, toxins, radiation, local trauma or infection.
Each sperm consists of a head, which contains the man’s genetic information, and its tip (acrosome) which will help the sperm penetrate the outer shell of the egg; a midpiece, which supplies the energy needed for movement; and the tail which propels the sperm forward.
Low sperm count, poor motility and/or a high percentage of abnormal forms can cause infertility. Anti-sperm antibodies may occur following surgery, trauma or infection of the genital tract. These antibodies impair sperm motility and affect the ability of the sperm to penetrate and fertilise the egg.
In some cases there is no sperm in the ejaculate (a problem called azoospermia). This may be “obstructive” due to an obstruction in the vas, epididymis or bilateral congenital absence of the vas. PESA is a microsurgical technique using a fine needle to draw seminal fluid from behind the obstruction. Azoospermia could also be due to insufficient or lack of sperm production because of testicular failure. The latter could be caused by hormonal or chromosomal abnormalities, previous infection such as mumps or undescended testes. TESA is the fine needle technique to aspirate testicular tissue and search for testicular sperm.
At The Fertility and Gynaecology Academy we have years of experience in PESA and TESA and many healthy babies have been delivered in our unit following sperm aspiration.