<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0">
    <channel>
        <title><![CDATA[Ups Directory .com Health > Reproductive Health]]></title>
        <link>http://upsdirectory.com</link>
        <description>UpsDirectory.com Free Web Directory </description>
	        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Best IVF Center in Bangalore - IVF Hospital in Bangalore]]></title>
                <link><![CDATA[https://upsdirectory.com/listing/best-ivf-center-in-bangalore--ivf-hospital-in-bangalore-983687]]></link>
			                <description><![CDATA[We all have doctors, but what really makes a good one? It's not just about knowing a lot. It's about how they listen, how they explain things, and how they make you feel. Sometimes finding the right one takes time, but it's really worth the effort. Dr. Kamini Rao Hospitals is a top IVF Centers in Bangalore. They really focus on getting the right diagnosis from the start, making sure everything is ethical, and creating a treatment plan just for each person. We've got a lot of experience helping people with both male and female fertility issues. We follow clear, evidence-based methods for things like teratozoospermia, making sure that advanced treatments like IVF and ICSI are suggested only if they're really the right path for you. When you prioritize good lab work and straightforward talks with patients, the center helps couples skip extra steps while also improving their chances.
Please understand… you're a patient and you'd rather not care about these details, but you can't afford to leave everything up to the doctor. As long as you have a good doctor, you're fine. But if you end up with a bad doctor, you're in serious trouble. You'll end up wasting time, money, energy. And by the time your wife will be so old, that even if you go to a good IVF doctor like me, you know, very, very little we'll be able to do for you.
So the moral of the lesson is do your homework. Don't assume you're not going to understand anything. If the doctor refuses to explain, that's a red flag.]]></description>
			            <pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2026 08:53:02 GMT</pubDate>
        </item>
	        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Clinical embryology course in bangalore]]></title>
                <link><![CDATA[https://upsdirectory.com/listing/clinical-embryology-course-in-bangalore-983686]]></link>
			                <description><![CDATA[At Medline Academics, we believe that good fertility outcomes begin with good foundations. Our embryology courses in Bangalore are designed to close the gap between theory and practical clinical work, emphasizing evidence-based diagnosis, sound interpretation of investigations such as semen analysis, and sound decision-making in infertility practice. By educating clinicians on why a diagnosis such as teratozoospermia truly counts, and when it really impacts fertility, our goal is to minimize misdiagnosis, ineffective treatment, and patient anxiety in favor of sound, patient-centered reproductive medicine.
Don't take shortcuts. Don't go to a nearby lab just because he happens to do a semen analysis. Go to a reliable lab if you want your testing done.
And if it's been reported as abnormal, insist that they do a morphology test with a stained slide so that you can actually reconfirm whether this is correct or not. Now, most of the time, occasional abnormal sperms will have no impact whatsoever, but there will very rarely be men who only have 1% normal sperms or 2% normal sperms. It's this very small group which is called teratozoospermic infertility.
It's not very common, but when it's picked up, it's really important. But the trouble with these abnormally shaped sperms is they don't function properly. They're not capable of fertilising the egg in the IVF lab. They can't get their wives pregnant after IUI. And this is a diagnosis which is easily missed because their count is normal and the motility is normal.
But it's the morphology which is abnormal, but it's not being tested properly. And this is often the couple where you have total failed fertilisation. Even with IVF, the sperms don't fertilise the egg because they're abnormally shaped.
And you only find this out the hard way. And the perfect treatment for men with abnormally shaped sperm or with teratozoospermia with less than 4% less than 4% normal forms by strict morphology is called ICSI or intracytoplasmic sperm injection, where we do in the IVF training lab what the sperm is not capable of doing for itself, which means the embryologist takes the eggs we give after the egg collection, strips them so you can hold the egg under a micromanipulator, very large instrument which magnifies it, holds the egg and then takes a single sperm and puts that single sperm inside the egg to fertilise it. And the good news is we can see the fertilisation rate with teratozoospermic sperms is very, very high.
As long as the wife is young and she has good quality eggs. Now, even within teratozoospermia, there are lots of different varieties and there is an uncommon form, which is called globozoospermia. Now, this is actually very easy to diagnose, provided the test for the sperm morphology is done properly, because what happens is in these people, the sperm head doesn't have an acrosomal cap, which means it's no longer oval and it's round and that's why it's called globozoospermia.
Now, for these men, even if you do ICSI, you still have total failed fertilisation after ICSI. And in fact, often the diagnosis is made only when the doctor realises, oh, we didn't get any fertilisation at all, even after doing ICSI. And that's when they go back and check the slides and check the morphology and find out that the man had globozoospermia.
And that was the reason. The good news is it's possible to treat these men with doing ICSI with assisted oocyte activation. Assisted oocyte activation means we add a special chemical called a calcium ionophore, which allows us to then do the ICSI in such a way that even though the sperm does not have an acrosomal cap, we can still achieve fertilisation.]]></description>
			            <pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2026 08:48:59 GMT</pubDate>
        </item>
	

    </channel>
</rss>