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Planar embryos have poor prognosis in terms of blastocyst formation and implantation
Abstract Normally, day-2 embryos show a crosswise arrangement of four cells with three blastomeres lying side by side. Cleavage anomalies include embryos that are characterized by a particular planar constellation of four blastomeres with presumed incomplete cleavage. Since little is known on the de...
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Published in: | Reproductive biomedicine online 2012-09, Vol.25 (3), p.267-272 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract Normally, day-2 embryos show a crosswise arrangement of four cells with three blastomeres lying side by side. Cleavage anomalies include embryos that are characterized by a particular planar constellation of four blastomeres with presumed incomplete cleavage. Since little is known on the developmental fate of such conceptuses, within a 10-month period all consecutive patients were screened for day-2 planar embryos. A total of 64/2070 embryos with suboptimal blastomere configuration were detected (3.1%). In conventional IVF, planar embryos were significantly less frequent (0.7%) as compared with intracytoplasmic sperm injection (2.8%; P < 0.05) and cases of testicular sperm extraction (5.4%; P < 0.01). Interestingly, embryos with a cleavage anomaly showed better morphology both on day 2 ( P < 0.005) and day 3 ( P < 0.001). In contrast, blastocyst formation ( P < 0.001) and blastocyst quality ( P = NS) was higher in tetrahedral embryos. There was a significant increase in implantation rate if tetrahedral embryos could be transferred compared with when planar embryos had to be transferred ( P < 0.01). It may be postulated that, in planar embryos, the mitotic spindle might have been affected, e.g. sperm centrosome composition or function, which in turn might have led to the observed cleavage anomaly. Normally, day-2 embryos show a crosswise arrangement of four cells with three blastomeres lying side by side. Cleavage anomalies include more planar embryos that are characterized by a particular flat constellation of four blastomeres with presumed premature cleavage (like a tetrafoliate clover). Since little is known on the developmental fate of such embryos within a 10-month study period, all consecutive patients were screened for the presence of day-2 planar embryos (study group). A total of 64 (out of 2070) embryos with abnormal blastomere configuration were detected (3.1%). Interestingly, in conventional IVF (0.7%), the presence of planar embryos was significantly less frequent as compared with intracytoplasmic sperm injection (2.8%; P < 0.05) and cases of testicular biopsy (5.4%; P < 0.01). Embryos from the study group showed better morphology both on day 2 ( P < 0.005) and day 3 ( P < 0.001). In contrast, blastocyst formation (survival to day 5 of preimplantation development) was higher in the normally cleaved control group ( P < 0.001) and so was blastocyst quality; however, the latter parameter did not reach level of significance. This was also r |
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ISSN: | 1472-6483 1472-6491 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.rbmo.2012.05.007 |