Don’t want a baby now? Freeze egg
Bengaluru: Kiranmayi, 35, a teacher, plans to opt for oocyte preservation or cypropreservation, which simply means freezing her eggs to use at a later time when she is ready to have a child.
“My family has a history of early menopause and so I plan to go in for cryopreservation,” she explains. Kiranmayi is among a growing tribe of working women in the city who are opting for the procedure, according to gynaecologists and IVF specialists.
Although the concept is new to the country, the trend appears to be catching on among Bengalureans, they say.
“Working women in the city have begun to make this smart move for a late and healthy pregnancy. Many of them want to preserve their oocytes, meaning eggs, because they don’t want to get pregnant at an early age,” says Dr Lavanya R, senior consultant, reproductive medicine, explaining that if used even in a late pregnancy the frozen eggs remain the same with no dilution of their properties, drastically cutting down the chances of a woman having an abnormal baby. “Women having babies at 35 or more have a high chance of having abnormal babies and so freezing your egg is the best option,” she says.
Doctor Chandrika Kulkarni, senior consultant, reproductive medicines at Narayana Health, reveals she has been approached by many women over 30 who want to put off having children and see oocyte preservation as the way out, as it does away with the risk of having abnormal babies. “Risk of chromosome anomalies is zero in such pregnancies,” she adds.
Dr Sanjay Agarwal of Mannat Fertility Centre, agrees that women in their thirties who have a very small window for pregnancy, are increasingly going in for egg preservation which is a twelve day pain- free procedure. He however, warns that preservation can be dicey as well, as the eggs may or may not work as expected.
Another reason why women are beginning to opt for the procedure is fear of cancer, according to some doctors. With cancer being seen among young women too, some are preferring to preserve their eggs before the therapy destroys them, say doctors.