Interleukin-1 and Implantation

  • Krüssel J
  • Hirchenhain J
  • Schanz A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Infertility and pregnancy wastage affect one of every nine couples in Western Europe and in the United States. The molecular events of embryonic attachment to the endometrial epithelium and subsequent invasion and nidation into the stroma have long been of interest, scientifically to reproductive biologists and clinically to couples with infertility or habitual abortion and to the physicians caring for them. In order to achieve a successful pregnancy in the human, two major conditions have to be fulfilled: during the 4–5 days of transport through the fallopian tube, the embryo must undergo a series of complex maturation processes and, in the same time, a receptive endometrium must have developed. Human endometrium undergoes characteristic cyclic changes of proliferation and secretion and, without embryonic implantation, the endometrium is shed and the menstrual bleeding occurs. Uterine endometrium therefore is the anatomic prerequisite for the continuation of our species and its main purpose during the reproductive age is to communicate with, receive, nourish and protect the implanting blastocyst.1

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APA

Krüssel, J.-S., Hirchenhain, J., Schanz, A., Hess, A. P., Huang, H.-Y., Simón, C., & Polan, M. L. (2007). Interleukin-1 and Implantation. In Immunology of Pregnancy (pp. 294–302). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-34944-8_23

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