Attempts to improve clinical pregnancy rates after in-vitro fertilization (IVF) and embryo transfer are constantly being made. Two changes in technique of embryo transfer of potential clinical importance were evaluated over two contiguous time periods in order to observe any corresponding change in clinical pregnancy (CP) rate per transfer: (i) embryo transfer catheter; (ii) ultrasound guidance. Catheter choices were hard: Tefcat, Tom Cat, or Norfolk; or soft: Frydman or Wallace. Ultrasound visualization was considered to be excellent/good when the catheter could be followed from the cervix to the fundus by transabdominal ultrasound with retention of the embryo-containing fluid droplet; fair/poor if visualization could not document the sequence of events. Embryo transfers were performed in 518 cycles. CP rates per transfer using soft and hard catheters was 36 and 17% (P < 0.000) respectively. CP rates per transfer for transfers performed with and without ultrasound guidance were 38 and 25% (P < 0.002) respectively. A statistically significant difference was also noted when visualization ranks were compared. CP rates per transfer in all excellent/good ultrasound-guided transfers was 41.5 versus 16.7% for fair/poor transfers (P < 0.038). In conclusion, performance of embryo transfer with a soft catheter under ultrasound guidance with good visualization resulted in a significant increase in clinical pregnancy rates.
To define the earliest renal morphological changes in patients with type I diabetes, we studied renal function and morphometric analysis of renal biopsies in 59 patients with diabetes for 5-12 years and normal blood pressure, normal creatinine clearance (CCr), and negative dipstick urinary protein. Arteriolar hyalinization and intimal fibrous thickening were noted in 43%. Glomerular basement membrane thickness and fractional mesangial volume were increased in 51% and 56%, respectively. The pre-pubertal and post-pubertal years of diabetes were associated with similar degrees of renal structural changes, but during the pre-pubertal years normal urinary albumin excretion (UAE) was seen. Principal factor analysis of morphometric structural parameters yielded four clusters of variables: "glomerular size" correlated with patient age, CCr, and UAE; "peripheral capillary decrease" correlated with glycosylated hemoglobin, diastolic blood pressure, glomerular filtration rate, and UAE; "mesangial increase" correlated with UAE; and "interstitial scarring" correlated with diastolic blood pressure. This study provides unique documentation of renal structural abnormalities which precede clinically evident renal functional abnormalities and documents that these early structural abnormalities are present in the pre-pubertal years of diabetes as well as postpuberty, and are associated with each other in constellations that correspond to postulated mechanisms in diabetic nephropathy.
Sodium polystyrene sulfonate (SPSS) is commonly administered for the acute and chronic treatment of hyperkalemia. Its oral intake is complicated by poor compliance due to multifaceted reasons. We therefore analyzed a method of reducing potassium (K) in formula by pretreatment with SPSS. If effective, this would bypass complications of enterally administered SPSS and provide low-K formula. Thirteen formulas and nutritional supplements were pretreated with SPSS to determine if one could bind K and provide formulas with decreased K contents. Using an SPSS concentration of 1 g/l mEq K in the formula, 62 +/- 2.6% (P less than 0.01, mean +/- SEM) of the K was removed in 30 min, while the sodium (Na) concentration was increased by 234 +/- 37% (P less than 0.01). Analysis suggests that the disproportionate increase in Na is due to exchange for calcium (Ca) and magnesium (Mg), interaction with proteins, and Na suspended with SPSS in the formula. Thus, SPSS pretreatment of formula is an effective method of making low-K formula, but the increase in Na exceeds the K reduction. Attention to possible complications of increased Na intake as well as decreased Ca and Mg intake is warranted.
We report on 4 of 9 sibs with a syndrome of stenosis of the renal arteries and chronic hypertension, variable stenosis or occlusion of cerebral, abdominal and probably coronary arteries due to suspected fibromuscular dysplasia, congenital cardiac abnormalities, brachydactyly and syndactyly of the hands and feet, and increased bone fragility consistent with a mild form of osteogenesis imperfecta. Three affected individuals have had mild to moderate learning disabilities. The parents and the remaining 5 sibs have normal hands and feet and no history of excessive fractures. Individual components of this syndrome may appear as isolated conditions, including fibromuscular dysplasia, brachydactyly, syndactyly, and osteogenesis imperfecta, and are autosomal dominant traits in many cases. Explanations for this familial occurrence include autosomal recessive inheritance, autosomal dominant inheritance with decreased penetrance, or parental gonadal mosaicism for a mutation involving a single gene or several contiguous genes.
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