Does controlled ovarian stimulation during in vitro fertilization affect the level of nitric oxide a potential indicator of oocyte quality?
Само за регистроване кориснике
2023
Аутори
Radaković-Ćosić, JovanaMiković, Željko
Mandić-Rajčević, Stefan
Sudar-Milovanović, Emina
Stojsavljević, Aleksandar
Nikolić, Gorana
Radojičić, Ognjen
Perović, Milan
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)

Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Infertility is a major global health issue, affecting approximately 9% of couples worldwide. Its prevalence increased steadily over the preceding decades, paralleling environmental and lifestyle changes. One assisted reproductive technique to overcome infertility is in vitro fertilization (IVF). The IVF procedure consists of several stages, one of which is controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) via various protocols allowing follicular recruitment and maturation in preparation for oocyte retrieval. Follicular fluid (FF) is the microenvironment in which oocytes develop during folliculogenesis, and FF information could be used to assess follicle and oocyte development and maturation stages. Nitric oxide (NO) is a component of FF that is being studied as a predictive factor of follicle maturation and egg quality and as a potential indicator of the success of COS during the IVF process. The hypothesis was that COS affects NO levels in the serum; more specifically, that NO levels in serum aft...er COS correlate with NO levels in FF, based on literature data on the influence of female reproductive hormones on NO metabolism and data on the change in the hormonal milieu affected by COS use. Furthermore, it was hypothesized that NO levels in serum and FF after COS were related to the number of high-quality female reproductive cells obtained during IVF. Assuming that NO levels in serum after COS correlate with NO levels in FF, the central hypothesis of this study is that serum NO levels after COS could be a valuable predictor of oocyte quality and the number of high-quality female reproductive cells achieved by COS. As a result of the hypothesis, measuring NO could be a novel way to improve the efficiency of IVF treatment.
Кључне речи:
COS / Follicular fluid / IVF / Nitric oxide / Oocyte quality / SerumИзвор:
Medical Hypotheses, 2023, 174, 111061-Финансирање / пројекти:
- Министарство науке, технолошког развоја и иновација Републике Србије, институционално финансирање - 200017 (Универзитет у Београду, Институт за нуклеарне науке Винча, Београд-Винча) (RS-MESTD-inst-2020-200017)
DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111061
ISSN: 0306-9877
WoS: 001026537600001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85151357515
Институција/група
VinčaTY - JOUR AU - Radaković-Ćosić, Jovana AU - Miković, Željko AU - Mandić-Rajčević, Stefan AU - Sudar-Milovanović, Emina AU - Stojsavljević, Aleksandar AU - Nikolić, Gorana AU - Radojičić, Ognjen AU - Perović, Milan PY - 2023 UR - https://vinar.vin.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/10846 AB - Infertility is a major global health issue, affecting approximately 9% of couples worldwide. Its prevalence increased steadily over the preceding decades, paralleling environmental and lifestyle changes. One assisted reproductive technique to overcome infertility is in vitro fertilization (IVF). The IVF procedure consists of several stages, one of which is controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) via various protocols allowing follicular recruitment and maturation in preparation for oocyte retrieval. Follicular fluid (FF) is the microenvironment in which oocytes develop during folliculogenesis, and FF information could be used to assess follicle and oocyte development and maturation stages. Nitric oxide (NO) is a component of FF that is being studied as a predictive factor of follicle maturation and egg quality and as a potential indicator of the success of COS during the IVF process. The hypothesis was that COS affects NO levels in the serum; more specifically, that NO levels in serum after COS correlate with NO levels in FF, based on literature data on the influence of female reproductive hormones on NO metabolism and data on the change in the hormonal milieu affected by COS use. Furthermore, it was hypothesized that NO levels in serum and FF after COS were related to the number of high-quality female reproductive cells obtained during IVF. Assuming that NO levels in serum after COS correlate with NO levels in FF, the central hypothesis of this study is that serum NO levels after COS could be a valuable predictor of oocyte quality and the number of high-quality female reproductive cells achieved by COS. As a result of the hypothesis, measuring NO could be a novel way to improve the efficiency of IVF treatment. T2 - Medical Hypotheses T1 - Does controlled ovarian stimulation during in vitro fertilization affect the level of nitric oxide a potential indicator of oocyte quality? VL - 174 SP - 111061 DO - 10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111061 ER -
@article{
author = "Radaković-Ćosić, Jovana and Miković, Željko and Mandić-Rajčević, Stefan and Sudar-Milovanović, Emina and Stojsavljević, Aleksandar and Nikolić, Gorana and Radojičić, Ognjen and Perović, Milan",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Infertility is a major global health issue, affecting approximately 9% of couples worldwide. Its prevalence increased steadily over the preceding decades, paralleling environmental and lifestyle changes. One assisted reproductive technique to overcome infertility is in vitro fertilization (IVF). The IVF procedure consists of several stages, one of which is controlled ovarian stimulation (COS) via various protocols allowing follicular recruitment and maturation in preparation for oocyte retrieval. Follicular fluid (FF) is the microenvironment in which oocytes develop during folliculogenesis, and FF information could be used to assess follicle and oocyte development and maturation stages. Nitric oxide (NO) is a component of FF that is being studied as a predictive factor of follicle maturation and egg quality and as a potential indicator of the success of COS during the IVF process. The hypothesis was that COS affects NO levels in the serum; more specifically, that NO levels in serum after COS correlate with NO levels in FF, based on literature data on the influence of female reproductive hormones on NO metabolism and data on the change in the hormonal milieu affected by COS use. Furthermore, it was hypothesized that NO levels in serum and FF after COS were related to the number of high-quality female reproductive cells obtained during IVF. Assuming that NO levels in serum after COS correlate with NO levels in FF, the central hypothesis of this study is that serum NO levels after COS could be a valuable predictor of oocyte quality and the number of high-quality female reproductive cells achieved by COS. As a result of the hypothesis, measuring NO could be a novel way to improve the efficiency of IVF treatment.",
journal = "Medical Hypotheses",
title = "Does controlled ovarian stimulation during in vitro fertilization affect the level of nitric oxide a potential indicator of oocyte quality?",
volume = "174",
pages = "111061",
doi = "10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111061"
}
Radaković-Ćosić, J., Miković, Ž., Mandić-Rajčević, S., Sudar-Milovanović, E., Stojsavljević, A., Nikolić, G., Radojičić, O.,& Perović, M.. (2023). Does controlled ovarian stimulation during in vitro fertilization affect the level of nitric oxide a potential indicator of oocyte quality?. in Medical Hypotheses, 174, 111061. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111061
Radaković-Ćosić J, Miković Ž, Mandić-Rajčević S, Sudar-Milovanović E, Stojsavljević A, Nikolić G, Radojičić O, Perović M. Does controlled ovarian stimulation during in vitro fertilization affect the level of nitric oxide a potential indicator of oocyte quality?. in Medical Hypotheses. 2023;174:111061. doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111061 .
Radaković-Ćosić, Jovana, Miković, Željko, Mandić-Rajčević, Stefan, Sudar-Milovanović, Emina, Stojsavljević, Aleksandar, Nikolić, Gorana, Radojičić, Ognjen, Perović, Milan, "Does controlled ovarian stimulation during in vitro fertilization affect the level of nitric oxide a potential indicator of oocyte quality?" in Medical Hypotheses, 174 (2023):111061, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111061 . .
