Journal article

Culture of viable human blastocysts in defined sequential serum-free media

DK Gardner, M Lane

Human Reproduction | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 1998

Abstract

In human in-vitro fertilization (IVF), embryos are routinely transferred to the uterus on either day 2 or day 3 of development, resulting in a 10-15% implantation rate. However, in other mammalian species, the transfer of cleavage stage embryos, which normally reside in the oviduct, to the uterus results in a significantly lower implantation rate compared with blastocysts. It is therefore proposed that, in order to increase implantation rates in human IVF, one has to move to extended culture and transfer at the blastocyst stage. The transfer of blastocysts will not only help synchronize the embryo with the female tract but will facilitate the identification of those embryos with little or no..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers