Infertility and Assisted Conception Flashcards

1
Q

List some factors that are increasing the demand for assisted conception therapy (ACT)

A

Increasing parental age
Increasing chlamydia
Male factor infertility
Improved success rates of ACT

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2
Q

List the main indications for ACT

A
Male factors
Unexplained infertility
Endometriosis
Tubal disease
Ovulatory disorder
Single parents/same sex couples
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3
Q

At what age does fertility start to decrease?

A

27

Significantly so at 37

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4
Q

What should females limit their alcohol limit to per week to improve fertility?

A

4 units a week

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5
Q

What is the optimal weight for males + females to improve fertility?

A

BMI 19-29

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6
Q

What medical interventions should be assessed before ACT to improve fertility?

A

Folic acid
Check rubella immunity
Cervical smear
Blood-borne viruses screen

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7
Q

Which drug class in particular can cause male infertility/azoospermia?

A

Steroids (if abused)

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8
Q

How long should a female wait before trying to conceive after being vaccinated against rubella?

A

3 months

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9
Q

List all the assisted conception treatments available

A
Donor insemination
Intra-uterine insemination (IUI)
In vitro fertilisation (IVF)
Intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
Fertility preservation
Surrogacy
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10
Q

What does intra-uterine insemination involve?

A

Sperm are injected into the uterine cavity around the time of ovulation

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11
Q

What does in vitro fertilisation involve?

A

Sperm and egg fertilise outside body and implanted into uterus

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12
Q

How is the normal menstrual cycle down-regulated in preparation for IVF? What are the side effects?

A

Synthetic GnRH agonist administered as spray/injection and a scan is performed
Hot flushes + mood swings
Nasal irritation
Headaches

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13
Q

How is the ovary stimulated to cause follicular development?

A

Synthetic GH injection

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14
Q

What are the risks to GH injection?

A

Allergy

Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome

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15
Q

How long must a male be abstinent before providing a sperm sample? What is the sperm assessed for?

A

72 hours

Volume, density, motility, progression

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16
Q

What does intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection involve?

A

Injecting sperm into egg outside the body (i.e. no fertilisation)

17
Q

What is ACT?

A

Any treatment which involves gametes outside the body

18
Q

What lifestyle interventions should be assessed before ACT to improve fertility?

A
Alcohol
Weight
Smoking
Drugs
Occupational exposure to hazards
19
Q

What dose of folic acid should most women be taking preconception? For how long into gestation?

A

0.4mg/day

12 weeks

20
Q

List indications for IUI

A

Sexual problems
Same sex
Discordant BBV
Abandoned IVF

21
Q

List indications for IVF

A

Unexplained infertility (>2 years)
Pelvic disease
Anovulatory infertility or mild male factor
Failed IUI (after 6 cycles)

22
Q

List the six stages of IVF

A
  1. Down regulation
  2. Ovary stimulation
  3. Oocyte collection
  4. Embryo growth
  5. Fertilisation
  6. Embryo transfer and luteal support
23
Q

What are the risks of oocyte collection?

A

Bleeding
Pelvic infection
Failure to obtain oocytes

24
Q

Outline the process of normal development of the human embryo

A

2 pronuclei –> fertilised egg –> 2 cells –> 4 cells –> 8 cells –> 16 cells (MORULA) –> early blastocyst –> blastocyst –> hatched blastocyst

25
Q

What day is the blastocyst typically transferred and undergoes cryopreservation?

A

Day 5

26
Q

List the components of the blastocysts

A

An inner cell mass (ICM) which forms the embryo
The outer layer of the blastocyst consists of cells called the trophoblast
A fluid-filled cavity surrounded by the trophoblast known as the blastocoele

27
Q

What is involved in luteal support during embryo transfer in IVF?

A

Progesterone supplement for 2 weeks

28
Q

List indications for ICSI

A

Severe male factor infertility
Previous failed fertilisation with IVF
Preimplantation genetic diagnosis

29
Q

When is surgical sperm aspiration indicated?

A

Azoospermia (very low sperm count)

30
Q

What is ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome?

A

Overesponse to treatment were you produce too many eggs –> bulging ovaries suck coagulation out of blood

31
Q

How is ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome prevented?

A

Use of antagonist for prevention
Elective freeze, single embryo transfer
Monitoring, analgesia, thrombosis prevention (fluids, TED stockings, fragmin)
Hospital admission (IV fluids, monitoring, paracentesis)

32
Q

List complications of ART

A

Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome
Multiple pregnancy
Ectopic pregnancy
Failed treatment or fertilisation
Surgical risks (bleeding, infection)
Problems in early pregnancy (miscarriage, ectopic)
Problems in pregnancy (prematurity, IUGR, congenital)

33
Q

What is the overall IVF success rate? What is the biggest predictor?

A

35%

Female age

34
Q

Which harmone is used clinically to measure ovarian reserve prior to IVF?

A

Anti-mullerian harmone

35
Q

List investigations for female infertility

A

Mid-progesterone (ovulating)
HSG (patency of tubes)
STI screen
TVUS

36
Q

In what situation would you have to surgically aspirate sperm?

A

Very low sperm count

Males with CF