Louisville Medicine Volume 67, Issue 4 | Page 22

UNDERSTANDING INFERTILITY CONCEPTION UNDER THE MICROSCOPE: IN VITRO FERTILIZATION AUTHOR Robert K. Hunter II, MD, MSc, MBA, FACOG I n June 2018, Louise Brown, the world’s first baby born from in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment, celebrated her 40 th birth- day. In the decades that have passed since her historic birth, we have seen remark- able advances in the clinical and labo- ratory sciences of assisted reproduction that have now led to the births of over 7 million children worldwide. In 2017, over 78,000 infants were born from IVF treatment in the United States, representing just over 2% of all births in the country. As IVF has continuously evolved, it now represents one of the safest and most successful treatment options 20 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE for patients coping with a variety of infertility diagnoses. In a typical IVF protocol, injectable gonadotropins are used to induce the growth and development of a number of oocytes over the course of about 10 days. The process is closely monitored, and med- ication doses are adjusted as needed to optimize a patient’s response. Once a number of peri-ovulatory ovarian follicles are present, final maturation of the oocytes and their surrounding granulosa cells is induced with a trigger shot, which simulates the natural mid-cycle Luteinizing Hormone surge. An ultrasound-guided transvaginal oocyte aspiration procedure is performed about 36 hours later. Oocytes that are recovered in the metaphase II stage of meiosis