3 results match your criteria: "Centre of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics[Affiliation]"
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)
September 2022
Assisting Nature, Centre of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Oocyte donation programs involve young and healthy women undergoing heavy ovarian stimulation protocols in order to yield good-quality oocytes for their respective recipient couples. These stimulation cycles were for many years beset by a serious and potentially lethal complication known as ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS). The use of the short antagonist protocol not only is patient-friendly but also has halved the need for hospitalization due to OHSS sequelae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReprod Biol Endocrinol
May 2020
Fertility Clinic Skive, Skive Regional Hospital, Skive, Denmark.
The prolonged lockdown of health services providing high-complexity fertility treatments -as currently recommended by many reproductive medicine entities- is detrimental for society as a whole, and infertility patients in particular. Globally, approximately 0.3% of all infants born every year are conceived using assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Endocrinol (Lausanne)
July 2019
Assisting Nature, Centre of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Elective freezing of all embryos, followed by frozen-thawed ET cycles emerged to prevent risk of Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome and to allow endometrium recovery after Controlled Ovarian Stimulation, leading to better IVF outcomes. Blastocyst Freeze-all policy can minimize the number of abnormal embryos and consequently failed ETs, but its efficacy in terms of cumulative rates has not been studied yet. A prospective cohort observational study was carried out in Assisting Nature, Center of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics, in Thessaloniki, Greece from January 2014 until December 2017.
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