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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Window of implantation
- Implantation in humans
- Synchronization required for implantation
- Implantation as the rate-limiting step
- Inadequate uterine receptivity
- Repeated implantation failure
- Uterine receptivity can be impaired
- Hysteroscopy
- Endometrial dating
- Ultrasound- the traditional dating
- Histological dating combined with a blood test
- Detecting enometrial pathologies
- Immunohistochemical dating
- Endometrial dating by electron microscopy
- Specific markers are insufficient
- Microarray analysis
- Up- and down-regulated genes
- High density microarray analysis
- Hormonal stimulation induces changes
- Customized endometrial receptivity array
- Profiling the gene signature
- Clinical use of the pET algorithm
- Implementation of ERA-associated pET
- ERA associated pET improves IVF outcomes
- Endometrial dating - summary
- Methods of increasing endometrial receptivity
- G-CSF increases IVF outcomes
- G-CSF does not increase IVF outcomes
- Mechanical interference
- Experimental design
- Effects of endometrial biopsy
- Initial reports on the effect of mechanical injury
- Local injury increases endometrial receptivity
- Endometrial biopsy and implantation/pregnancy
- Endometrial biopsy increases clinical pregnancy
- Endometrial injury doesn't improve IVF outcomes
- Cochrane analyses
- Underlying molecular mechanisms
- Inflammation
- Experimental design
- Expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines
- Biopsy-induced inflammatory events
- TNFα initiates an inflammatory response
- Results
- Our next questions…
- We found that
- Effect of DCs on endometrial epithelial cells
- Suggested model
- Sumary and conclusions
- Epilogue
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Implantation as the rate-limiting step for successful IVF treatment
- Inadequate uterine receptivity & implantation failures
- Endometrial dating methods in routine IVF treatments
- Treatment methods used to increase endometrial receptivity
- Molecular mechanism by which injury increases endometrium receptivity
- Effect of injury-induced DCs and macrophages on implantation-associated genes by endometrial cells
- Implications of the development of a protocol treatment that improves endometrial receptivity
Links
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Talk Citation
Granot, I. (2019, December 31). Protocols for uterine preparation for implantation [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/ELMF9816.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Irit Granot has no commercial/financial relationships to disclose
Other Talks in the Series: The Female Reproductive System: from Basic Science to Fertility Treatments
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I'm Irit Granot.
I am a senior embryologist.
I am the technological and quality assurance manager of the IVF lab,
at the IVF unit, Herzliya Medical Center.
The topic of my talk is "protocols for uterine preparation for implantation."
0:17
Implantation of the embryo in the uterus
is crucial for establishment of successful pregnancy.
The preparation of the endometrium for implantation is hormone-dependent.
The pituitary gonadotropic hormones, FSH and LH,
stimulate the ovary to secrete the sex steroids estrogen and progesterone,
which regulate the morphological and functional changes
that are involved in acquisition of endometrial receptivity.
Estrogen, which is mainly secreted during the first half of the menstrual cycle,
induces the proliferation of the endometrial cells.
Therefore, this period is referred to as the proliferative phase of the cycle.
Progestrone, which is the predominant sex steroid in the second half of the cycle,
induces the differentiation of the endometrial cells to form the decidua,
the receptive tissue for the implanting embryo.
This half of the cycle,
known as the secretory phase,
is characterized by the formation of large secretory endometrial glands,
which secrete high amounts of cytokines and growth factors,
as well as vascularization,
infiltration of the endometrium by a variety of immune cells from the blood stream,
swelling of the tissue by a localized increase in vascular permeability,
and development of tissue edema.
The uterus becomes receptive during the mid-secretory phase
for a limited period that spans 7-10 days after the LH surge.
In a 28-day cycle,
it is between days 19 and 23 of the cycle.
This period is commonly known as the window of implantation.
Implantation can only take place during the window of implantation.
Human embryo implantation is a three-stage process