Summary:
In a study concerned with risk factors with an impact on the success of infertility
treatment by methods of in vitro fertilization (IVF) the authors present the initial
results obtained in a group of 42 women: 28 of them never smoked, 6 were
ex-smokers and 8 smoked also in the course of treatment.
The smokers had significantly higher cadmium blood levels than non-smokers
(0.58 ng.ml-1 vs.0.31 ng.ml-1) while the values of Cd residues were independent on
smoking (mean 0.12 ng,ml-1).The follicular levels of different sex hormones before
the onset of hormonal stimulation were similar in smokers and non-smokers and
there were no differences in the application of different therapeutic procedures.
The fertilization ratio was significantly lower in smokers and ex-smokers as
compared with women who never smoked: while in non-smokers 61.2% oocytes
could be fertilized, in ex-smokers only 40.1% and in women who smoked during
IVF only 25.1% oocytes. Among smokers there were 2-3 times as many where it did
not prove possible to ensure even the development of one embryo as compared
with ex-smokers and women who never smoked (62.5% vs.20.0% and 28.6% resp.).
Among women who became pregnant after a single cycle of IVF therapy were
non-smokers only.
Key words:
assisted reproduction - in vitro fertilization - effect of smoking
|