15+ Years Experience 6,000+ IVF Successes 70%+ Success Rate Book Free Consultation Today 15+ Years Experience 6,000+ IVF Successes 70%+ Success Rate Book Free Consultation Today
Blastocyst Culture Ahmedabad

Blastocyst Culture & Day 5 Embryo Transfer in Ahmedabad

Extended Embryo Culture | Gardner Grading | Survival of the Fittest in the Lab
After your eggs are retrieved and fertilised, they enter one of the most critical phases in IVF — the culture period. In the days that follow, your embryos will be watched closely by Wellspring's embryology team as they divide, compact, and — if they have the developmental capacity — transform into blastocysts by Day 5 or 6.
✓ Medically reviewed by Dr. Pranay Shah, MS (ObGy)

Book an Appointment


    Your information is completely safe and confidential

    The Embryo Development Journey - Day 0 to Day 5 & Beyond

    To understand why blastocyst culture matters, you first need to understand what is actually happening to your embryos inside the incubator — and what happens naturally inside the body during those same days. These two timelines must be perfectly synchronised.
    Stage Cell Count Natural Location What’s Happening
    Day 0 🔵 Fertilisation
    1 cell (Zygote)
    Fallopian tube Egg + Sperm unite via ICSI. Single cell with two pronuclei visible.
    Day 1 ✅ Pronuclei Check
    2PN Stage
    Fallopian tube Fertilisation confirmed. Failed fertilisation embryos excluded here.
    Day 2–3 🟡 Cleavage Stage
    4–8 cells
    Fallopian tube Old IVF standard. Embryo still in fallopian tube in nature. NOT ready for uterus.
    Day 4 🟠 Morula Stage
    16–32 cells
    Entering uterus Cells compacting. Critical transition begins. Natural position: just entering uterus.
    Day 5–6 ⭐ 🏆 BLASTOCYST
    100–200+ cells
    ✅ Uterus ICM + Trophectoderm fully formed. Natural position: inside uterus. CORRECT for transfer.

    Understanding IMSI Treatment

    Learn from our experts and get inspired by real patient journeys

    Fresh vs. Frozen Embryo Transfer: Which Has Higher Success?
    Fresh vs. Frozen Embryo Transfer: Which Has Higher Success?
    Fresh vs. Frozen Embryo Transfer: Which Has Higher Success?
    Fresh vs. Frozen Embryo Transfer: Which Has Higher Success?
    Browse All Videos

    The Synchronisation Principle — Why Day 5 Is the Biological Sweet Spot

    In a natural pregnancy, the fertilised egg spends the first 4–5 days travelling slowly down the fallopian tube, dividing as it goes. It only enters the uterus on approximately Day 5, when it has reached the blastocyst stage. The endometrium (uterine lining) has its own hormonal clock — it is receptive to embryo implantation for a specific window of roughly 24–48 hours on Days 5–7 after ovulation.

    When an embryo is transferred on Day 3, it arrives in the uterus 2 days before it would naturally get there — and crucially, 2 days before the endometrium is prepared to receive it. A Day 5 blastocyst arrives precisely when the window is open. This is not a minor technical difference. It is the biological equivalent of knocking on a door at the exact right moment versus two days early.

    The IVF Attrition Rate — Why Fewer Embryos on Day 5 Is Not Bad News

    This is the section most patients need to read before Day 5 results arrive — because without context, the numbers can feel devastating. Here is what typically happens to a cohort of embryos between egg retrieval and Day 5:
    Stage Typical Attrition What This Means
    Eggs Retrieved 100% (baseline) e.g. 10 eggs collected
    Mature Eggs (MII) 70–80% survive e.g. 7–8 mature eggs available for ICSI
    Fertilised (Day 1 — 2PN check) 70–80% of mature eggs e.g. 5–6 fertilised normally
    Cleavage Stage (Day 3) 80–90% of fertilised e.g. 4–5 dividing normally
    Blastocyst Stage (Day 5–6) 40–60% of Day-3 embryos e.g. 2–3 blastocysts formed — these are your best embryos
    Grade AA/AB/BA Blastocysts 50–70% of blastocysts e.g. 1–2 top-quality blastocysts for transfer or freezing

    Gardner Grading — How Wellspring Scores Your Blastocysts

    Every blastocyst produced at Wellspring IVF is graded by our embryologists using the internationally recognised Gardner grading system. The grade determines transfer priority, freezing order, and whether the embryo is suitable for PGT-A biopsy. Understanding your embryo grades helps you have a meaningful conversation with Dr. Shah about your treatment plan. The Gardner system grades two distinct structures inside the blastocyst:
    • Inner Cell Mass (ICM): The cells that will form the baby — graded A (excellent), B (good), or C (fair)
    • Trophectoderm (TE): The cells that will form the placenta — graded A (excellent), B (good), or C (fair)
    • Expansion Grade: How expanded the blastocyst cavity is — graded 1 (early) to 6 (fully hatched)
    Gardner Grade What It Describes Clinical Significance
    AA Excellent ICM + Excellent Trophectoderm Highest implantation potential. First choice for single embryo transfer (eSET). Freeze priority Grade 1.
    AB Excellent ICM + Good Trophectoderm Very high implantation potential. Routinely transferred or frozen as first priority.
    BA Good ICM + Excellent Trophectoderm Very high implantation potential. Equivalent to AB in most clinical outcomes.
    BB Good ICM + Good Trophectoderm Good implantation potential. Standard choice for transfer if AA/AB/BA not available.
    BC / CB Good/Excellent ICM + Fair Trophectoderm (or vice versa) Moderate implantation potential. May be transferred if higher grades not available.
    CC Fair ICM + Fair Trophectoderm Lower implantation potential. Transferred only if no better-grade embryo is available.
    Expansion Grade 1–6 Blastocyst expansion stage (1=early, 6=fully hatched) Grade 3, 4, 5 (full/expanded/hatching) are ideal. Grade 6 (hatched) is also excellent.
    ★★★★★ 4.9/5.0

    What Our Patients Say

    Real stories from real families who trusted us with their fertility journey
    500+ Google Reviews  •  Verified Patient Testimonials

    Join 500+ Satisfied Families

    Read all our verified Google reviews or share your own experience

    Blastocyst Culture & PGT-A Genetic Testing - An Inseparable Pair

    Preimplantation Genetic Testing for Aneuploidies (PGT-A, formerly PGS) — the process of checking embryos for chromosomal abnormalities before transfer — is only possible at the blastocyst stage. Here is why, and what it means for your treatment:

    Why PGT-A Requires Blastocyst Stage

    PGT-A biopsy involves removing 5–8 cells from the Trophectoderm (outer layer) of the blastocyst. This layer is large enough at Day 5/6 to allow a safe biopsy without damaging the ICM (the cells that form the baby). At Day 3, the embryo has only 6–8 cells total — a biopsy would remove 1–2 cells and risk severely damaging the embryo.

    Without blastocyst culture, PGT-A is not possible. If a patient needs genetic testing — due to recurrent IVF failure, recurrent miscarriage, advanced maternal age, or known chromosomal abnormality — extended culture to Day 5 is a clinical prerequisite, not an optional extra.

    The PGT-A + Blastocyst Workflow

    Day 5/6: Blastocyst forms → Trophectoderm biopsy performed by embryologist
    Same day: Biopsied blastocyst immediately Vitrified (frozen)
    Days 7–14: Biopsy sample sent to genetics lab for chromosomal analysis
    Results received: Euploid (chromosomally normal) embryos identified
    Next cycle: Euploid embryos thawed and transferred in a dedicated FET cycle
    Read our full PGS / PGD / PGT-A page for complete detail on genetic testing at Wellspring.

    Blastocyst Culture & Single Embryo Transfer (eSET) — Preventing Twin Pregnancies

    One of the most significant practical benefits of blastocyst culture is that it enables confident Single Embryo Transfer (eSET) — transferring just one embryo without compromising the pregnancy rate. Here is why this matters:

    Higher Confidence Per Embryo

    A Grade AA blastocyst has a 50–60% implantation rate per transfer. This high individual probability makes transferring a single embryo medically reasonable — the risk of the transfer failing is acceptably low.

    Surplus Embryos Stay Frozen

    Any high-quality blastocysts not transferred are Vitrified and stored for future use — either for a second attempt if needed, or for a future sibling. Read about our Embryo Freezing service for full detail.

    Prevents High-Risk Twin Pregnancies

    Twin pregnancies carry significantly higher risks — premature birth, low birth weight, gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia, and NICU admission. Transferring one high-quality blastocyst avoids these risks without meaningfully reducing the pregnancy rate.

    Blastocyst Transfer Success Rates — What the Evidence Shows

    Success rates for blastocyst transfer are consistently and significantly higher than Day 3 transfers across published IVF outcome data. Here is what independent research and clinical registry data report:
    Outcome Day 3 Transfer Day 5 Blastocyst Transfer Advantage
    Implantation Rate per Embryo 25–35% 45–60% ~70% relative improvement
    Clinical Pregnancy Rate per Transfer 35–45% 50–65% Consistently higher
    Live Birth Rate per Transfer (under 35) 30–42% 45–58% Significantly higher
    Multiple Pregnancy Rate (with eSET) Higher (multiple embryos transferred) Lower (eSET feasible) Safer, comparable success
    Miscarriage Rate Higher (more aneuploid embryos transferred) Lower (natural selection already occurred) More chromosomally competent embryos

    Your Strongest Embryos. Your Best Chance.

    Blastocyst culture is not a gamble — it is the most evidence-based selection process available in IVF today. At Wellspring IVF, Dr. Pranay Shah and our embryology team use it not as a standard protocol applied to everyone, but as a clinical decision tailored to each patient's individual embryo cohort.

    Blastocyst Culture at Wellspring IVF — Our Lab & Technology

    The quality of blastocyst culture is entirely dependent on the IVF laboratory environment. Temperature fluctuation, CO2 level instability, exposure to light, vibration — each of these variables can impair embryo development between Day 3 and Day 5. At Wellspring, our lab is engineered to eliminate all of these variables.

    Lab Environment Standards

    • ISO Class 5 air quality (ultra-clean laminar flow cabinet)
    • Continuous CO2 and O2 monitoring — maintained within ±0.1% tolerance
    • Temperature-controlled to 37°C — monitored 24 hours
    • VOC-free (Volatile Organic Compound) lab environment — no chemical interference
    • Anti-vibration workstations for embryo handling
    • UV-filtered lighting to prevent photo-damage to embryos
    At Day 3, an embryo has only 8 cells — removing one removes 12.5% of its mass. At Day 5, the trophectoderm has 100–200 cells; removing 5–6 causes negligible disruption and produces far more accurate genomic data. Day 3 biopsy has been largely abandoned globally.

    Time-Lapse Embryo Monitoring

    Wellspring uses time-lapse embryo monitoring technology — a system where continuous photographs of the embryo are taken every 5–15 minutes without removing the embryo from the incubator. This gives our embryologists a complete developmental video of each embryo from Day 0 to Day 5, enabling:
    • Detection of abnormal cell division patterns that predict poor implantation
    • Identification of the specific hour each embryo reaches each developmental milestone
    • Better embryo ranking beyond static morphology alone
    Traditional embryo assessment requires removing embryos from the incubator for grading — causing brief temperature and gas fluctuations. Time-lapse eliminates this disruption entirely.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Common questions about PGT-A, PGT-M, embryo biopsy, cost, and legal restrictions in India.
    Ask a Question
    Complete Information Map

    IVF Treatment — Related Pages & Sub-Treatments

    Ensure all links below are live before publishing. These cross-links strengthen the Treatments Silo and pass authority between related pages:

    Related Insights & Articles

    Start Your Parenthood Journey Today

    Expert care, proven results, and compassionate support every step of the way