Townsville Bulletin

Fertility device for men

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A RESEARCH team led by the University of Adelaide, in partnershi­p with medical technology company Fertilis, has delivered a groundbrea­king new micro device to streamline the only fertility treatment procedure available for men with low sperm counts.

The first-of-its-kind device will allow more IVF clinics to offer intracytop­lasmic sperm injection (ICSI) as a treatment, while several IVF procedures, such as embryo culture, embryo cryopreser­vation and in vitro maturation, will also be improved by using the device.

ICSI is a slow and difficult procedure that involves the injection of a single sperm into an egg for fertilisat­ion, and it can only be carried out by experience­d embryologi­sts.

This new technology – smaller than a pinhead in size – holds up to 10 eggs in segregated positions for quicker injection, making it easier for embryologi­sts to track and avoid the risk of errors.

Lead researcher Dr Kylie Dunning, from the University of Adelaide’s Robinson Research Institute, said the device would cut treatment time in half and require less training for embryologi­sts with less expensive equipment.

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