Embryo Banking Australia

in Newcastle, NSW, Australia



Category: What happens to embryos after failed IVF

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Shop 5, 19 Honeysuckle Drive
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S32° 55' 32.18484" E151° 46' 4.6218"   (-32.9256069, 151.7679505)
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freeze and hoping for the best. First they’re dehydrated so the chance of damage from ice crystals forming is minimised. Then the embryos are cooled to minus one hundred forty degrees and cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen until they’re required.

Thawing takes around 1-2 hours. It’s important that the embryos are frozen at a precise time in their development. This can be commonly after they are at a four or eight cell stage of cell division. This can be because they have become a little more stable by this stage and there’s less probability of them being broken during the freezing and thawing stages.

Embryo Transfer Myths Revealed

You could be forgiven for imagining the uterus is sort of a huge empty space where the embryo rattles around until it finds somewhere soft to nestle in. However those pictures of a pear formed “hollow” area aren’t entirely correct. The back and front walls of the uterus actually meet once there’s not a baby forcing them apart.

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Embryo Banking Australia

Address: Shop 5, 19 Honeysuckle Drive
Phone: 02 4028 4458