BACKGROUND: Recent reports have suggested that ultrasound (US) guidance during embryo transfer might improve pregnancy rates. METHODS: A prospective randomized (computer-generated random table) trial was performed to compare embryo transfer under abdominal US guidance (n ⍧ 255 women) with clinical touch embryo transfer (n ⍧ 260). RESULTS: The clinical pregnancy rate was 26.3% (67/255) in the US-guided transfer group compared with 18.1% (47/260) in the clinical touch transfer group (P < 0.05). The implantation rate was 11.1% (100/903) in the US group compared with 7.5% (66/884) in the clinical touch group (P < 0.05). US-guided transfer was associated with a decrease in the difficulty of the transfers: 97% of transfers were easy in the US-guided group compared with 81% in the clinical touch group (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: US-guided embryo transfer increased pregnancy and implantation rates in IVF cycles, as well as the frequency of easy transfers. It is suggested that the decrease in cervical and uterine trauma can play a role in the increase in pregnancy rates associated with USguided transfer. It is recommended that embryo transfer should be performed under US guidance.
The aim of the study was to assess the fatty acid composition of human fertilization-failed oocytes. A total of 150 unfertilized oocytes from 43 women undergoing in-vitro fertilization (IVF) were analysed using capillary gas chromatography. The majority of fatty acids were saturated (79.22%), of which stearic (38.65%) and palmitic (32.66%) acids were the most abundant. Of the monounsaturated fatty acids (14.27%) oleic acid was the most abundant (9.77%). Polyunsaturated fatty acids comprised 6.50% of fatty acids, the n-6:n-3 ratio being 7.73. The ratio of eicosapentaenoic acid:docosahexaenoic acid was approximately 5. It is concluded that the most common fatty acids in human unfertilized oocytes are either saturated or monounsaturated fatty acids, whose main function is to provide an energy source. A number of differences in fatty acid composition were observed, in comparison with other biological samples. In particular, stearic and eicosapentaenoic acids were more prominent, and oleic and linoleic acids were less prominent; this may reflect some specific peculiarity of oocyte metabolism.
Endocannabinoid anandamide and cannabinoid receptors have been described in some organs of the female reproductive system, but little is known about the expression of these receptors in human oocytes. The aim of the study was to describe the expression of cannabinoid receptors in human oocytes and to investigate their differential distribution at various stages of meiotic resumption in human oocytes. A total of 750 human oocytes from 214 patients were analysed by Western blot, immunocytochemistry and PCR. For this study, oocytes that were not suitable for intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) (germinal-vesicle and metaphase-I stages), as well as metaphase-II oocytes that had not developed into an embryo after ICSI were used. Western blot analysis revealed the presence of CB1 and CB2 receptor proteins in human oocytes. CB1 and CB2 receptor immunostaining patterns changed during the various stages of meiotic resumption. Localization of CB1 receptor was peripheral at germinal-vesicle stage, homogeneous over the entire oocyte at metaphase I and peripheral at mature metaphase II. CB2 receptor localization was peripheral at germinal-vesicle and metaphase-I stages but homogeneous over the entire cell at metaphase II. This finding suggests a possible role for endocannabinoids, acting via receptors, in the maturation of female gametes and fertilization. The number of couples with sterility problems attending fertility programmes is rising but treatment is not always successful. Important problems associated with failure to conceive remain unresolved because many physiological aspects of human reproduction are still unknown. Endocannabinoids are endogenous chemical compounds that mimic the action of the main psychoactive component of marijuana, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol. An endogenous cannabinoid named anandamide has been found in human follicular fluid. Thus, in order to develop knowledge in this field, in the present study we have described the presence of the cannabinoid receptors CB1 and CB2 (the proteins required to mediate the action of the cannabinoids) in the early stages of meiotic resumption of oocytes (the stages before ovulation) and we could postulate that the endocannabinoids could act in the regulation of maturation of oocytes. Our study, together with other studies, indicates that the endocannabinoid system may play a role in human reproduction.
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