July 26, 2009

Choosing The Sex Of Your Baby – Ways To Get A Boy Or Girl

Great strides in medical reproductive science have been made over the last few decades. Indeed, it’s now possible to safely increase the odds of having either a boy or a girl, which is something that would have been unheard of just half a century ago. So, when choosing sex of baby, whether boy or girl, what should people who are contemplating such an option know about “gender selection,” as it’s called?

To begin with, attempting gender selection is a way of trying to choose a girl or a boy before getting pregnant. It uses a variety of methods to increase the odds of having a baby of a sex that’s most desired. And depending upon the method chosen, it’s possible these odds can reach nearly 100 percent under the right circumstances.

On the market are a number of non-medical or clinical over the counter sex selection kits which promise to help proper gender occur. Most use different natural substances to bring about changes in the body chemistry of the prospective mother and father, which is thought to make the odds of having a boy or girl – depending upon body chemistry type – much higher. This approaches 96 percent, in many cases.

As far as actual medical procedures, there are several of them. One of the most popular is known as MicroSort. It seeks to separate male sperm according to differences in each of the sperm cells’ DNA, the differences of which are known to favor either a male or a female child.

Once the sperm has been categorized into those sperm cells which will lead to a male or a female, the next phase in the procedure uses either IUI (intrauterine insemination) or IVF (in vitro fertilization) to emplace fortified (or “enriched”) sperm cells into the female’s womb, for one. Or (in IVF), a ripe egg from the female is fertilized with the sperm and placed in the womb. There’s a 92 percent success factor for girls and a lower rate of 81 percent for boys.

The MicroSort success rates, though, depend upon a successful pregnancy occurring in the first place. In this regard, IUI runs about 16 percent and IVF doubles that, at about 32 percent. This is the typical rate, and is just about in line with factors for any other method of inducing pregnancy. What this means is that the odds of a sex-selected outcome after pregnancy has occurred are fairly high.

It’s comforting to know, that there are a wide range of options for attempting gender selection for a couple or a hopeful-mother desiring a child of one sex or the other. The chances of such a happenstance occurring, indeed, are greater than ever before. Just make sure to investigate each procedure careful and put in some time on careful research before going through with such a process.

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