| Literature DB >> 24604231 |
Charalampos Siristatidis1, Nikos Vrachnis2, Paraskevi Vogiatzi3, Charalampos Chrelias4, Andrea Quinteiro Retamar5, Stefano Bettocchi6, Demián Glujovsky5.
Abstract
Successful embryo implantation is a complex process that involves multiple biological mechanisms and reciprocal interactions between the embryo and the proliferated endometrium. In this review, we provide an informative contribution on the pathways underlying the beneficial nature of endometrial injury toward improving implantation rates of embryos conceived and through in vitro fertilization. The evidence published to date are in favor of inducing local endometrial injury in the preceding cycle of ovarian stimulation to improve pregnancy outcomes in women with unexplained and recurrent implantation failure. Endometrial injury triggers a series of biological responses but the findings suggest that no particular pathway is solely adequate to explain the association between trauma and improved pregnancy rates rather than a cluster of events in response to trauma which benefits embryo implantation in ways both known and unknown to the scientific community.Entities:
Keywords: endometrial biopsy; endometrial injury; endometrial receptivity; implantation failure; in vitro fertilization
Year: 2014 PMID: 24604231 DOI: 10.1177/1933719114525270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Sci ISSN: 1933-7191 Impact factor: 3.060