{"id":75179,"date":"2018-07-13T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2018-07-13T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.fertilitysmarts.com\/2018\/07\/13\/the-egg-donation-medical-process-for-egg-donors"},"modified":"2020-02-21T20:10:36","modified_gmt":"2023-11-04T17:47:10","slug":"the-egg-donation-medical-process-for-egg-donors","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.fertilitysmarts.com\/the-egg-donation-medical-process-for-egg-donors\/2\/1977","title":{"rendered":"The Egg Donation Medical Process: For Egg Donors"},"content":{"rendered":"

Becoming an egg donor can feel overwhelming and scary—especially the first time! Once you’ve been selected, the process can move pretty fast. Here is what you can expect from the medical process of providing eggs.<\/p>\n

Every month, in a natural menstrual cycle, women produce multiple egg follicles<\/a> (sacs in the ovaries that hold the developing eggs), but only one follicle will become a mature egg<\/a> and be released from the ovary during ovulation. The remainder of the other developing follicles do not receive enough hormones from the body to develop into mature eggs, so they pass from the body during menstruation. Some women naturally have more developing follicles than others—what’s known as your resting antral follicle count<\/a>—and the number of eggs your body produces may change from month to month, and reduces over time.<\/p>\n

In an egg donation cycle, a physician prescribes medications, or fertility drugs, to stimulate the ovaries to get more follicles to develop into mature eggs than the usual one per month. There are many different medication protocols that can be used to create a higher number of mature eggs than usual, a process known as superovulation<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Your egg donor medication protocol may vary depending upon which doctor you go to, your resting antral follicle count and other fertility tests, and how many follicles are developing mature eggs in a single cycle. If you’re a repeat donor and have your protocol information that worked well for you (or didn’t) from a prior cycle you can share that information with the doctor, and they may use the protocol that already worked for you. Others will prefer to stick to a protocol they’re comfortable with.<\/p>\n

It is important that you understand which drugs you will be taking upfront, what trigger shot<\/a> the doctor plans on using, and how many eggs they aim to retrieve.<\/p>\n

The first stop in the medical process is any pre-screening that is initially done.<\/p>\n

Read: <\/strong>Becoming an Egg Donor: The Recruitment and Screening Process<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n

Medical Pre-Screening<\/h2>\n

When you sign up to become an egg donor, after being selected by recipients, you will be required to undergo a series of medical tests. Some clinics or egg banks may conduct these tests before you are chosen by intended parents (IPs), but most conduct the medical screening after you have been matched with recipients. Not all clinics do genetic testing or counseling, and there is some variation from clinic to clinic in the tests you may undergo.<\/p>\n

Usually, the initial medical screening includes:<\/p>\n