Embryo freezing is a process that permits individuals to store embryos for sometime in the future. An individual can also freeze eggs, which are not fertilized. An embryo is developed after fertilization and the cells begin to divide. Physicians can freeze and store unused embryos (fertilized eggs) created during IVF, which may include intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), using a process called cryopreservation.
Need for Embryo Freezing
- There are numerous reasons a man and woman may decide to freeze and store their embryos:
- They may feel it is a superior choice than having the additional embryos destroyed.
- It can give one more opportunity to get pregnant if the IVF cycle fails the first time. The couple won’t need to do IVF once more.
- On the off chance that the man and lady have an infant, they can utilize the embryo later to have a subsequent child.
- The woman can preserve embryos before she starts therapies, for example, for cancer, which may diminish or eliminate her odds of getting pregnant.
- The embryo could be preserved and given to another person in a donor program.
- The embryo could be preserved and given for research.
Embryo Freezing Techniques
Vitrification
Fast cooling convention (vitrification) includes media containing a higher concentration of cryoprotectants and has a moderately lot more limited freezing time. The fundamental concern when freezing an embryo is the development of ice between the cells. This can be effectively avoided by a profoundly skilled embryologist.
Slow cooling
Slow cooling includes seeding where the cryopreservation straw is physically moved by cold forceps dipped in liquid nitrogen further away from the embryo to start ice development which spreads to the rest of the solution containing the embryos. This prevents harm to the embryos. Most centers today apply vitrification for freezing embryos.
Thawing
During this method, the frozen sperm/oocytes/embryos are thawed (de-frozen) to room temperature, noticed for further development, and afterward moved into the patient’s uterus after stimulating endometrial development. At the time of embryo substitution, the straws are taken out from the liquid nitrogen and set in a water shower at room temperature before re-hydrating with unique media. Toward the finish of re-hydration, the embryos are cultured in media inside the carbon dioxide incubators and permitted to grow further either to day 2 or blastocyst prior to transfer.
Risks Involved in Embryo Freezing
Research shows that the freezing and thawing of embryos does not harm subsequent babies made through IVF. The length of time the embryo was stored does not affect IVF success rates.
With improving technology, the difference in pregnancy rates between the frozen embryos and fresh is negligible. In addition, the stimulation process with frozen embryo transfer is gentler, with hormone levels closer to normal in the woman, which may also improve pregnancy rates.
Any ice crystals formed during the slow freeze process may cause damage to an embryo while thawing. This is one of the reasons vitrification is the preferred cryopreservation technique. Research shows that there is no increase in the risk of birth defects among children born from frozen embryos compared with normal births.
Egg banking, also known as oocyte cryopreservation, is a moderately new strategy for fertility protection where a developed, unfertilized egg is retrieved from a female, frozen and stored for later use.
Egg banking includes a female deciding to have eggs retrieved from her ovaries, frozen to preserve their viability and put away until she is ready to utilize them in a future in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment to achieve pregnancy.
Egg freezing and egg banking can be utilized to preserve fertility in patients having aggressive medical treatments, for example, chemotherapy, or in patients who wish to protect their fertility presently to begin a family later.
Egg freezing process in conjunction with IVF
Egg freezing is achieved through a new IVF cycle, avoiding egg treatment in vitro.
- Stimulation of a woman’s ovaries utilizing fertility medications to produce a few egg follicles during one new IVF cycle
- Harvesting eggs from the woman’s ovaries through surgical retrieval
- Preparing and freezing of the eggs for preservation through a cycle known as vitrification
- The fast-freezing technique of vitrification makes it possible to freeze eggs rapidly so that ice crystals don’t form between cells
Egg banking in cancer treatment
Egg banking increases opportunities for women going through cancer treatment who preserve their fertility. In the event that they have a partner, they could go through a stimulation and retrieval cycle, developing embryos, and freeze them for some time in the future. They could do likewise without an available partner, in the event that they willing to utilize donor sperm to develop embryos. This would ensure them hereditary offspring, yet with a missing sperm donor father. In the event that they come up short on a partner and ability to utilize a sperm donor, egg freezing would empower as it both secures their fertility and gives them a decision over the genetic father of their post-treatment children. A comparable need may emerge with women with hereditary illnesses or different conditions, for example, premature ovarian failure, who had not yet found a spouse yet needed to ensure they have healthy eggs at a later point in their life for reproduction.
Advantages of egg banking
- Egg banking permits patients to extend their fertility. Thawed eggs hold their capacity to get fertilized from the time of freezing, giving the patient peace of mind by knowing pregnancy might be conceivable later on.
- For women who need to through fertility damaging treatments, for example, chemotherapy, egg freezing may permit them to preserve their fertility and start a family after treatment.
- Egg freezing can likewise assist women with premature fertility loss, for example, reduced ovarian reserve, by banking healthy eggs at an early age when they are likely to be viable for sometime in the future. In these cases, the woman’s doctor will suggest egg freezing and banking.
- A few women decide to freeze and bank their eggs for social reasons, for example, waiting for the right partner or not wanting to take a leave from work. The frozen eggs can be thawed, fertilized and embedded for pregnancy sometime in the not too distant future.
Risks of egg banking
Egg freezing carries several risks to the woman or couple, including:
- Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS).
- Surgical complications.
- Emotional effects.
In today’s world, many women are choosing to focus on their careers, education, or personal goals before starting a family. Social Egg Freezing allows you to “pause” your biological clock by preserving your younger, healthier eggs for use in the future.
Understanding the Biological Realities
A woman is born with all the eggs she will ever have. The decline in both quantity and quality is a natural process:
- At Birth: Approx. 1 million eggs.
- At Puberty: Approx. 200,000 eggs remaining.
- Every Cycle: One egg matures, while hundreds of others degenerate.
By freezing your eggs in your prime reproductive years (20s to early 30s), you secure a much higher chance of a successful pregnancy later in life.
The Science: How Eggs are Frozen
The human egg is the largest cell in the body and contains significant water. To prevent ice crystals from damaging the cell during freezing, we use a process called Vitrification. This involves dehydrating the egg and replacing the water with cryoprotectants, then cooling it instantly to -196°C.
The 2-Week Process:
- Stimulation: 10-15 days of hormone injections to encourage multiple eggs to mature.
- Monitoring: Regular ultrasounds to check follicle growth (18-20mm is ideal).
- Retrieval: A quick, painless procedure under IV sedation using ultrasound guidance.
- Banking: The eggs are frozen and can be stored indefinitely without losing quality.
Success Rates & Planning
Success depends largely on the age at which the eggs were frozen, not the age at which they are thawed. Key considerations include:
- Quantity: We recommend storing at least 10 eggs per pregnancy attempt.
- Implantation: Younger eggs have a much higher chance of successful implantation and live birth (estimated 15-30% per cycle).
- Safety: Over 5,000 babies have been born globally from frozen eggs with no increase in birth defects compared to natural conception.
Financial Considerations
In India, a typical egg freezing cycle costs approximately 1.8 Lakh INR. This includes testing, medications, monitoring, and the retrieval procedure. Annual storage fees usually apply after the first year.
Your Future, Your Timeline
Dr. Pankaj Talwar provides personalized, state-of-the-art fertility preservation services. Let’s discuss if egg freezing is right for you.
📍 3118, 3rd Floor, Sector 46, Near Ambedkar Chowk, Gurugram, Haryana
A cancer diagnosis is life-altering, but modern medicine now allows us to look beyond the immediate treatment toward your future quality of life. Fertility Preservation is the process of saving eggs, embryos, or sperm so that individuals can still have biological children after completing their cancer therapies.
Does Cancer Treatment Affect Fertility?
Unfortunately, chemotherapy and radiation therapy specifically target rapidly dividing cells. While this is effective against cancer, it also attacks healthy reproductive cells like spermatozoa and oocytes. The level of risk depends on the drug type:
- High Risk: Alkylating agents like Cyclophosphamide, Busulfan, and Procarbazine.
- Medium Risk: Platinum analogs such as Cisplatin and Carboplatin.
- Low Risk: Plant derivatives (Vincristine) and certain antibiotics (Bleomycin).
Radiotherapy to the pelvic area or lower abdomen also poses a significant threat to ovarian and testicular function.
When to Act?
Timing is everything. It is vital to talk to an ART (Assisted Reproductive Technology) specialist as soon as the disease is diagnosed. At Talwar Fertility & Child Health Centre, we coordinate closely with oncologists to ensure fertility procedures do not delay life-saving cancer treatments.
Preservation Options for Men & Women
For Women: Oocyte (Egg) freezing, Embryo freezing, Ovarian cortex freezing, or Ovarian transposition (moving ovaries out of the radiation field).
For Men: Semen cryopreservation (Sperm freezing) or testicular tissue freezing.
Fertility in Children with Cancer
For prepubertal children who cannot yet produce mature eggs or sperm, options like testicular and ovarian cortex freezing are available. While some of these techniques are still considered experimental, they offer the only hope for biological parenthood later in life. Legal consent and careful ethical weighing are mandatory for pediatric cases.
Making the Decision
Your medical team will determine the best approach based on your biopsy report, the specific type of cancer, and the window of time available before chemo-radiation begins. Being well-informed is the first step toward taking control of your reproductive future.
Plan for Your Future Family Today
Before you start cancer treatment, ensure your options for parenthood are protected. Consult Dr. Pankaj Talwar for a priority onco-fertility session.
📍 3118, 3rd Floor, Sector 46, Near Ambedkar Chowk, Gurugram, Haryana
Visit: www.drpankajtalwar.com
Finding out you have an ovarian cyst can be overwhelming, especially when you hear terms like “germ cell tumor.” However, Dermoid Cysts (Mature Cystic Teratomas) are the most common type of ovarian germ cell neoplasm, accounting for 20% of all ovarian cases—and the good news is, they are almost always benign.
What Exactly is a Dermoid Cyst?
Dermoid cysts are fascinating from a biological perspective. They are composed of tissues derived from different germ cell layers. This means a single cyst can contain tissues like:
- Hair and skin cells
- Teeth or bone fragments
- Sebaceous (oily) secretions
- Thyroid or nervous tissue
Most dermoid cysts are “silent,” meaning they cause no pain and are detected incidentally during a routine ultrasound at our Gurugram clinic. However, larger cysts can cause symptoms through compression of the bladder or bowels, and in severe cases, they may lead to ovarian torsion (twisting) or rupture.
Characteristic Ultrasound Signs
Dermoid cysts have very specific sonographic markers that help us differentiate them from simple or cancerous cysts. If you see these terms on your report, here is what they mean:
- “The Tip of the Iceberg” Sign: This describes areas where a hyperechoic component (like bone or thick hair) causes acoustic shadowing, hiding the structures behind it.
- Rokitansky Nodule: A hyperechoic nodule within the cyst, usually representing a mix of hair, fat, or teeth.
- Dermoid Mesh (Dot-Dash Sign): Echogenic lines and dots caused by hair fibers floating within the fluid.
- Floating Echogenic Globules: An uncommon but distinct sign seen in larger masses.
When is Surgery Necessary?
Management depends entirely on the size and symptoms. At Talwar Fertility & Child Health Centre, we follow a evidence-based protocol:
- Under 4 cm: These can often be monitored with regular ultrasound scans if they are asymptomatic.
- Over 4 cm: Surgical removal (cystectomy) is generally recommended. Larger cysts carry a high risk of torsion, which can cut off blood supply to the ovary and result in the loss of the organ.
We prioritize laparoscopic (minimally invasive) surgery to remove the cyst while preserving as much healthy ovarian tissue as possible, which is vital for your future fertility.
Preserve Your Ovarian Health
Concerned about an ovarian mass? Get a detailed sonographic evaluation and expert surgical advice in Gurugram.
📍 3118, 3rd Floor, Sector 46, Near Ambedkar Chowk, Gurugram, Haryana
Visit: www.drpankajtalwar.com
Medical BreakthroughTech to Grow Eggs on Women’s Arm: A Ray of Hope for Cancer Survivors
Published: Dec 2010 | Updated: April 25, 2026 | By Dr. Prof (Col) Pankaj Talwar, VSM, Md, Phd, Medical Council Registration Number – HMC-HN 16822
Every year, cancer treatment causes premature menopause and infertility in thousands of women of reproductive age in India. However, a revolutionary procedure developed at the Army Hospital Research and Referral is set to change this reality.
Doctors have discovered a groundbreaking method to help women cancer survivors conceive by growing eggs in their own forearm—a first-of-its-kind procedure in the country.
“We transplant preserved ovarian tissue under the skin of the woman’s forearm to harvest eggs, which will help her conceive in the future. This is a potential cure for infertility caused by chemotherapy or radiotherapy.”
How the Procedure Works
The ovarian tissue of cancer patients is preserved in a specialized lab before they begin treatments like surgery or radiation. Once the patient is cancer-free and ready to conceive, the tissue is grafted back onto their forearm or abdomen.
- Pre-testing: The tissue is thoroughly tested to ensure no cancer cells are present.
- Stimulation: Specific drugs are administered to encourage the tissue to produce eggs.
- The Lump: Patients will notice a pea-sized lump at the transplant site, which indicates egg development.
- Extraction: Eggs are then extracted via a minor surgery under local anesthesia for use in In-Vitro Fertilization (IVF).
Timeline and Cost
The entire process, from transplantation to harvesting, is expected to take approximately three to four months. The estimated cost for this advanced procedure ranges between ₹1.5 lakh to ₹2 lakh.
Consult Dr. Pankaj Talwar
For advanced fertility treatments and expert guidance, visit Talwar Fertility and Child Health Centre.
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