Gordts S, Roziers P, Campo R, Noto V
Medical Center for Fertility Diagnostics and In Vitro Fertilization, Leuven, Belgium.
Fertil Steril. 1990 Mar;53(3):469-72.
Contrary to the belief that rapid cooling and thawing of mammalian embryos is detrimental to survival, it has been shown that under certain conditions mammalian embryos can survive rapid freezing-thawing. In this study, 237 human fertilized oocytes (93 pronucleates, 20 multipronucleates, and 124 cleaved embryos) were frozen for a period of 1 day to 7 months using the ultrarapid freezing system. After thawing, 94% of the embryos in the pronucleate group and 89.5% in the multipronucleate group showed normal morphological features, and 79% and 71%, respectively, started to cleave. Forty cleaved embryos were also frozen-thawed, but only 15 (37.5%) survived at thawing. Thirty-four frozen-thawed cleaved embryos were transferred to 20 patients during spontaneous cycles. Four patients became pregnant.