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Intravenous Laser Irradiation Effect on Treatment Resistant Thin Endometrium

K

Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Endometrium
Laser

Treatments

Procedure: Intravenous laser irradiation treatment

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03081130
Laser on thin endometrium

Details and patient eligibility

About

We will recruit 30 poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients, aged 35-45 year old, and treat with intravascular laser irradiation of blood (ILIB) via an intravenous catheter for irradiation of the blood under a period of 60 minutes for 10 days. We will evaluate the number and the quality of oocyte retrieved, endometrium thickness and pregnancy rate. The goal of the study is to evaluate whether ILIB is the efficient treatment to improve the ovarian response and the clinical outcome of the poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients.

Full description

Intravenous laser irradiation of blood (ILIB) is the use of He-Ne laser (632.8 nm) via an intravenous catheter for irradiation of the blood with a lower power of 1-5 milliwatt (mW) and a period of 10-90 minutes to promote functional re-generation mitochondria and pro-oxidant/antioxidant equilibrium in living bodies. ILIB was developed experimentally by the Russian researchers and was introduced into clinical practice in 1981. The treatment with He-Ne laser has been applied on many organs and on the hematologic and immunologic system. Quite a number of both animal and human experiments have demonstrated that ILIB has a wide range of effects, including biostimulation, analgesia, antiallergic effects, immunomodulation, vasodilatation, antihypoxic, anti-oxidant, anti-aging and anti-inflammatory effects. The aid of treatment of acute cerebral infarction, rheumatoid arthritis, arthrosclerosis of the leg, redifferentiation therapy of malignant tumors has been studies for years and over the past 30 years, there are growing studies that has challenging the therapeutic effect of ILIB.

The incidence of poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients among infertile women has been estimated at 9-24%. It fact, as a result of a lower number of oocytes retrieved, there are fewer embryos to select and transfer and subsequently these patients have lower pregnancy rates per transfer and lower cumulative pregnancy rates. Despite an enormous number of papers on the topic of poor ovarian response and thin endometrium patients have been published in the literature, so far it has been impossible to identify any efficient treatment to improve the ovarian response and the clinical outcome of this group of patients. In most cases the mechanism involved in follicular depletion is still not clear. Previous studies showed that treatment with anti-oxidants could improve the outcomes of the poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients, however, the effect is limited. Since ILIB has anti-aging, anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, we want to know the effect on the poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium women. Through the lower power of He-Ne laser to promote functional re-generation mitochondria and pro-oxidant/antioxidant equilibrium, poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium women may gain the power to improve the ovarian function and endometrium function and higher the pregnancy rates.

We will recruit 30 poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients and treat with intravenous laser irradiation of blood (ILIB) via an intravenous catheter for irradiation of the blood under a period of 60 minutes for 10 days. We will evaluate the number and the quality of oocyte retrieved, endometrium thickness and pregnancy rate. The goal of the study is to evaluate whether ILIB is the efficient treatment to improve the ovarian response and the clinical outcome of the poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

Under 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • We will recruit 30 poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients

Exclusion criteria

  • women with underlying medical diseases, such as diabetes or hypertension

Trial design

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Intravenous laser irradiation treatment
Description:
We will recruit 30 poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients and treat with intravenous laser irradiation of blood (ILIB) via an intravenous catheter for irradiation of the blood under a period of 60 minutes for 10 days.
Treatment:
Procedure: Intravenous laser irradiation treatment
control
Description:
We will recruit 30 poor ovarian responders and thin endometrium patients and treat with oral estradiol 8 mg per day and oestrogen gel 4 g per day for 14 days

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Hsiao-Wen Tsai

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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