“…However, when single and multiple chromosome errors were analyzed together, as shown in Figure 1B, we found that chromosome errors could occur in any of the 23 pairs of chromosomes, but errors in chromosome 21 (11.3%) were the most frequent chromosome anomaly, followed by chromosomes 22 (10.8%), 16 (7.7%), 7 (6.2%), and 15 (5.7%). When we analyzed chromosomes 13, 18, 21, and XY, which are the most common chromosomes examined by FISH, we found that only 12.7% of the blastocysts had these chromosome errors, and the rate increased to 29.5% if 12 chromosomes were analyzed (8,9,13,14,15,16,17,18,21,22, and XY). However, if all chromosomes were examined with microarray, 56.6% of the blastocysts had chromosome errors (Table 1).…”