Publications by authors named "R Lombroso"

Several reports have described an association between the presence of soluble human leukocyte antigen G (sHLA-G) in human embryo culture supernatants (ES) and implantation success. However, not all studies agree with these findings. To further document this debate, a multicentre blinded study was performed to investigate, on a large number of IVF ES and ICSI ES, whether sHLA-G is a useful criterion for embryo selection before transfer.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the stability of the aneuploidy rate of the first polar body. Knowing the stability of the oocyte aneuploidy rate for each patient would allow the first analysis to be used as a prognostic tool for further attempts at intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). After a first unsuccessful ICSI attempt with preconceptional screening, 24 women underwent a second attempt.

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Background: The cytokine/chemokine levels of individual follicular fluids (FFs) were measured to determine whether a biomarker could be linked to the developmental potential of the derived embryo.

Methods: Fluid was collected from 132 individual FFs that were the source of oocytes subsequently fertilized and transferred. In each, a bead-based multiplex sandwich immunoassay (Luminex) was used to measure 28 cytokines and chemokines simultaneously.

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Introduction: Uterine receptivity was assessed simultaneously by measurement of vasoactive cytokines possibly involved in development of spiral arteries and by assessment of endometrial and uterine arterial blood flow. The objective was to explore the relationship between cytokine-related dysregulation and endometrial vascularisation in women with repeated implantation failures after in vitro fertilisation embryo transfer (IVF-ET).

Materials And Methods: We studied 40 women with recurrent IVF/ICSI-ET failures, despite replacement of more than 10 embryos of 'good quality', and 8 fertile controls.

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The implantation process, currently thought to be the most critical step in achieving a successful early pregnancy, remains one of the most important unsolved processes in reproductive medicine. It depends on uterine-dependent and embryo-specific events, which need to be critically coordinated. Early embryo signaling following a maternal hormonal or cytokine-mediated preparation phase seems to be involved in stages immediately before, during and just after the apposition step to permit adequate proliferation of the stroma.

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