Following in vitro fertilization, the criteria commonly used to select human embryos for transfer are the cleavage rate and gross morphology, the contention being that those embryos which divide more rapidly and have regular, spherical blastomeres are more likely to lead to a pregnancy. In order to assess the validity of this assumption, the development in vitro of spare embryos was investigated. Eggs and embryos were cultured in Earle's balanced salt solution containing 10% heat-inactivated patient's serum, and insemination was performed at 40 hr post human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). At 82-90 hr post hCG, up to four embryos were transferred. Any spare embryos were cultured in the same medium for up to 6 days and scored daily for cell number and morphology using a "quality" scale of 4-1 according to degree of fragmentation and shape of the blastomeres. Of 317 fertilized eggs, 55 (17%) developed to the fully expanded blastocyst stage. The remaining embryos ceased development at the one-cell (6; 2%), two-cell (49; 15%), four-cell (110; 35%), eight-cell (61; 19%), and cavitating morula (36; 11%) stages. The relationship between developmental arrest and gross morphology is discussed.
The low incidence of pelvic infection questions the value of using prophylactic antibiotics. No increased risk of infection was demonstrated in cases with preexisting peritoneal damage.
This study was carried out to investigate whether ovarian cystectomy interferes with follicular recruitment and the number of oocytes retrieved in an in-vitro fertilization (IVF) cycle. Patients who had previously undergone unilateral ovarian cystectomy (n = 90) and control patients (n = 90) with no history of ovarian surgery were included in our study. The parameters compared were the number of follicles recruited and the number of oocytes obtained from each ovary. In patients who had undergone surgery, the normal ovaries recruited a significantly higher number of follicles (P < 0.001) and yielded a significantly higher number of oocytes (P < 0.001) compared with the contralateral ovaries which had undergone cystectomy. In the control patients, no significant differences were identified between the left and right ovaries. These results demonstrate that ovarian cystectomy reduces follicle and oocyte numbers in ovulation induction cycles.
Both poor response to ovarian stimulation and raised basal FSH are markers of reduced ovarian reserve and predict an increased risk of early menopause.
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