Abstract

Twenty-nine patients, previously treated unsuccessfully with a median 9.5 cycles of conventional intracervical donor insemination, were offered fallopian catheterization on the side of the dominant follicle and direct insemination at the presumed site of fertilization, the ampullary-isthmic junction. Forty-five of 50 cycles were associated with successful tubal catheterization and 6 of these cycles were conceptional. Five viable intrauterine pregnancies resulted. We conclude: (1) that direct sperm transfer to the fallopian tubes is possible without the need for anesthesia or operation; and (2) that at the time of ovulation, the fallopian tube isthmus can be catheterized without later interfering with ovum or embryo transport to the uterus. Optimum timing for fallopian catheterization in relation to ovulation and the risk of side effects both remain to be established.

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