View clinical trials related to Embryo Development.
Filter by:The clinical outcome of Ultra-low oxygen tension on post thawed human blastocyst
The aim of this non-interventional study is to compare the blastulation rate per fertilized oocyte in two different single step culture media commercially available (GEMS and Irvine culture media).
The aim the investigators study is to analyze the embryo development if oocytes of the participants are injected with sperm from a longer or shorter (2 hours) abstinence duration.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether in Assisted Reproductive Technologies the use of culture medium supplemented with G-CSF, a growth factor working on stem cells, may improve the embryo implantation and pregnancy rate in infertile patients undergoing IVF cycles.
In this study the suitability of two -sequential and single step- commercially available culture media from the same brand was compared. The aim of such study is to verify whether is possible to improve the efficiency of infertility treatments in those couples who usually have a high cycle cancellation rate, such as poor responder patients and severe male infertility. The study population is composed of couples attending the fertility clinic: to this purpose all those couples approaching IVF treatments with a diagnosis of OAT, cryptozoospermia, advanced maternal age and women with a "poor responder" diagnosis were recruited. IVF treatments were randomly set to be cultured either with two-step sequential media or with one-step media to acquire data concerning the ongoing embryo culture development and clinical outcomes.
The purpose of this study is to compare different culture conditions. The effect of the type of incubator (standard versus mini-incubator) and the effect of the oxygen concentration (5% versus 20%) will be evaluated on the embryo quality
The purpose of this study is to compare two culture media.
The purpose of this study is to assess whether reduced oxygen tension in embryo culture has any effect on clinical outcome.