The effects of the cryopreservative agents dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and propanediol (PROH) on mature human and mature mouse oocytes have been examined with transmission electron microscopy. Treatment of CD-1 mouse oocytes and human preovulatory oocytes in a stepwise manner with either DMSO or PROH up to 1.5 M appears to trigger the exocytosis of 70-80% of the cortical granules in all oocytes. Successive stages in premature dehiscence, including a loss in granule electron density, fusion of the granule-limiting membrane with the oolemma, and extrusion of the cortical granule core into the perivitelline space, have been observed in all human oocytes studied. In addition, all human DMSO- and PROH-treated oocytes exhibited crypt-like invaginations and clusters of endocytic vesicles that subtend the oolemma. The presence of these crypts and pinocytotic vesicles in treated oocytes may suggest a mechanism for the retrieval of cortical granule membrane that is inserted into the original plasmalemma during exocytosis. The paucity of cortical granules in treated mouse and human oocytes as it potentially relates to an impaired ability to elicit the cortical reaction at fertilization is discussed.
The incidence of ectopic pregnancy after IVF is increased approximately 2.5-5-fold compared with natural conceptions; however, the aetiology for this increased risk remains unclear. One proposed practice change to decrease the incidence of ectopic pregnancy is blastocyst embryo transfer on day 5 rather than cleavage-stage embryo transfer on day 3. A retrospective cohort study was conducted to compare the risk of ectopic pregnancy following fresh day-5 embryo transfer with day-3 embryo transfer among women who underwent IVF and achieved pregnancy from 1998 to 2011. There were 13,654 eligible pregnancies; 277 were ectopic. The incidence of ectopic pregnancy was 2.1% among day-3 pregnancies and 1.6% among day-5 pregnancies. The adjusted risk ratio for ectopic pregnancy from day-5 compared with day-3 transfer was 0.71 (95% confidence interval 0.46-1.10). Although this analysis included 13,654 cycles, with a two-sided significance level of 0.05, it had only 21.9% power to detect a difference between the low incidence of ectopic pregnancy among both day-3 and day-5 transfers. In conclusion, this study was not able to demonstrate a difference in the risk of ectopic pregnancy among day-3 compared with day-5 transfers.
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