The use of transvaginal color flow imaging after in vitro fertilization to identify optimum uterine conditions before embryo transfer

To assess whether a measure of uterine blood flow impedance (the pulsatility index, PI) as determined by transvaginal ultrasonography with color blood flow imaging, may be used to assess endometrial receptivity immediately before the time of embryo transfer (ET) after assisted conception. A prospect...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fertility and sterility 1992-02, Vol.57 (2), p.372-376
Hauptverfasser: Steer, Christopher V., Campbell, Stuart, Tan, Seang L., Crayford, Timothy, Mills, Carla, Mason, Bridgett A., Collins, William P.
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container_end_page 376
container_issue 2
container_start_page 372
container_title Fertility and sterility
container_volume 57
creator Steer, Christopher V.
Campbell, Stuart
Tan, Seang L.
Crayford, Timothy
Mills, Carla
Mason, Bridgett A.
Collins, William P.
description To assess whether a measure of uterine blood flow impedance (the pulsatility index, PI) as determined by transvaginal ultrasonography with color blood flow imaging, may be used to assess endometrial receptivity immediately before the time of embryo transfer (ET) after assisted conception. A prospective study of infertile women who had undergone treatment to induce multiple follicular development followed by ultrasound-guided oocyte retrieval. The oocytes were fertilized in vitro. The Hallam Medical Centre. Eighty-two women (22 to 44years of age) who all had three or four good quality embryos available for transfer to the uterus. All women were examined by transvaginal ultrasonography, with color flow imaging and blood flow analysis, immediately before ET. The mean PI of the left and right uterine arteries, the pregnancy rate (PR) (%), the embryo implantation rate (%), and the multiple PR (%). The patients were grouped according to whether the PI was low (1.00 to 1.99), medium (2.00 to 2.99), or high (3+). There were 27 women in the low PI group, 36 in the medium, and 19 in the high. The PR (%), embryo implantation rate (%), and multiple PR (%) were 41%, 15.3%, and 27.3% for the low PI group and 47%, 22.2%, and 47.1% for the medium PI group. There were no pregnancies in the high PI group. Thus 35% (19/54) of women who failed to become pregnant had a PI value>3.0. These data suggest that the PI value on the day of ET could be used to: (1) increase the implantation rate by showing which embryos should be cryopreserved until the uterus is more receptive and (2) reduce the multiple PR by indicating that the number of embryos transferred should be limited when the uterus is most receptive.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Birth control
Embryo Transfer
Female
Fertilization in Vitro
Gynecology. Andrology. Obstetrics
Humans
Medical sciences
Models, Biological
Pregnancy
Pregnancy, Multiple
Regional Blood Flow
Sterility. Assisted procreation
Transvaginal color Doppler
Ultrasonography - methods
uterine artery blood flow
uterine receptivity
Uterus - blood supply
Uterus - diagnostic imaging
Vagina
title The use of transvaginal color flow imaging after in vitro fertilization to identify optimum uterine conditions before embryo transfer
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