Abstract

Thirty-two patients undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) were given bromocriptine either 1 or 12 hours before anesthesia or received no drug to determine what effect suppression of transient, anesthesia-induced hyperprolactinemia would have on peripheral and follicular fluid hormones, fertilization and cleavage rates, and pregnancy. Thirty minutes after anesthesia, there was a 120-ng/mL rise in serum prolactin (PRL) in control patients versus an insignificant change in women given bromocriptine. Levels of PRL in follicular fluid were significantly less, and estradiol (E2) levels were higher (P less than 0.05) in all bromocriptine-treated patients compared with controls, whereas follicular fluid levels of progesterone (P), inhibin activity, and midluteal serum P were unaffected. Although fertilization and pregnancy rates were similar, a greater proportion of fertilized oocytes from bromocriptine-treated patients advanced to cleaving embryos compared with controls (95% versus 63%, respectively; P less than 0.001). We conclude that bromocriptine, given before anesthesia, can suppress transient, anesthesia-induced hyperprolactinemia and dramatically alter follicular fluid concentrations of PRL and E2. Although these changes in hormonal milieu affected neither oocyte fertilization nor pregnancy rate in our IVF patients, they seemed to have a positive influence on embryonic development after IVF.

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