Natural insemination IVF is better for older women struggling with infertility

Natural insemination (IVF), the process where thousands of sperm are added to an egg in a culture dish to achieve fertilisation, is more likely to lead to a successful pregnancy for older women with infertility than Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) a new study from the University of 亚洲色吧 and Repromed has found.
One in every 25 children in Australia is born by assisted reproductive technologies, with ICSI currently being used to achieve fertilisation in two-thirds of these. ICSI is performed as an additional part of an IVF treatment cycle where a single sperm is injected into each egg to assist fertilisation using very fine micro-manipulation equipment. In older women, where fewer eggs are retrieved in each cycle, it is common practice to perform ICSI in the hope that this will optimise fertilisation rates.
While introduced primarily in Australia for severe male factor infertility, today ICSI is often used in preference to standard IVF insemination in couples without male factor infertility.
鈥淎 reason why standard IVF insemination in couples with advanced maternal age and non-male factor infertility may increase their chances of having a baby is because it still allows natural s