Fetal Exencephaly Arising as a Result of Preimplantation Exposure to Ammonium Chloride
SUPAT SINAWAT, M.D., M.Sc.*
Affiliation : * Reproductive Biology Unit, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine, Khon Kaen University,
Khon Kaen 40002, Thailand.
AbstractObjectives : To investigate the effect of preimplantation exposure to 0.6 mM ammonium
chloride on both preimplantation and postimplantation development of (F1 x F1) strain mouse
embryos.
Method : Two-cell stage mouse embryos were randomly allocated to culture in either
M16 medium or M16 added with 0.6 mM ammonium chloride for 2 days before being transferred
to 2.5 day pseudopregnant recipients. Embryo morphology was assessed after 1 and 2 days of
culture. The recipient females were sacrificed on day 15.5 of gestation. The number of implanta
tion sites, fetuses, moles and any gross abnormalities found were noted.
Results : There was no significant difference in the number of embryos reaching morula
stage after two days of culture between the two groups (X2=0.86, P>0.05). Implantation and preg
nancy loss rates between the two groups were within comparable ranges. Crown-rump length was
significantly higher in the group of embryos exposed to ammonium chloride (t=2.46, P<0.05).
There was one gross abnormality, exencephaly, detected in the experimental group (4.35% per
fetus obtained).
Conclusions : Besides the abnormal increase in fetal size, preimplantation exposure to
ammonium chloride also resulted in gross abnormality, exencephaly. If such effects occurred in
the course of human in vitro fertilization, it could be devastating. Further study in this aspect is,
therefore, clinically very important in preventing unwanted abnormalities that could arise from
human in vitro fertilization.
Keywords : Exencephaly, Ammonium Chloride, Preimplantation Exposure
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