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Dive into the research topics where John Garrisi is active.

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Featured researches published by John Garrisi.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2007

Maternal age, morphology, development and chromosome abnormalities in over 6000 cleavage-stage embryos

Santiago Munné; Serena Chen; P. Colls; John Garrisi; X Zheng; Natalie A Cekleniak; M Lenzi; P Hughes; J. Fischer; M Garrisi; Jacques Cohen; G Tomkin

Previous studies assessing the relationship between embryo development, maternal age and chromosome abnormalities were either small or analysed mostly embryos not suitable for replacement. The present study includes >6000 embryos, including many suitable for replacement. Embryos with the best morphology and development were 44% euploid in patients younger than 35, decreasing to 21% in patients 41 and older. The worst morphology group had only 30% normal embryos from patients younger than 35, and 12% in embryos from patients 41 and older. Thus morphological analysis was able to improve the population of normal embryos only from 30 to 44% in the best of cases. Regarding specific abnormalities, 20% of embryos were aneuploid, 32% aneuploid plus other abnormalities, and the rest had post-meiotic abnormalities. Of those, only aneuploidy increased with maternal age. There were no big differences in the frequency of chromosome abnormalities depending on patient indication, within a similar age group. In summary, previous trends detected in suboptimal embryos were also confirmed in the best embryos for replacement. Although dysmorphism and advanced maternal age are both related to chromosome abnormalities, these parameters can yield at most <50% euploid embryos, and other techniques such as preimplantation diagnosis are required to ensure that only euploid embryos are replaced.


Fertility and Sterility | 1997

Preimplantation genetic diagnosis increases the implantation rate in human in vitro fertilization by avoiding the transfer of chromosomally abnormal embryos

Luca Gianaroli; M.Cristina Magli; Anna Pia Ferraretti; A. Fiorentino; John Garrisi; Santiago Munné

OBJECTIVE To verify the percentage of chromosomally abnormal preimplantation embryos in patients with a poor prognosis and possibly to increase the chance of implantation by selecting chromosomally normal embryos. DESIGN A prospective, randomized, controlled study. SETTING In vitro fertilization program at the Reproductive Medicine Unit of the Società Italiana Studi Medicina della Riproduzione, Bologna, Italy. PATIENT(S) In a total of 28 stimulated cycles, the maternal age was > or = 38 years and/or the patient had > or = 3 previous IVF failures, factors that indicated a poor prognosis. After consent, 11 patients underwent preimplantation genetic diagnosis for aneuploidy, whereas 17 controls underwent assisted zona hatching. INTERVENTION(S) Simultaneous analysis of chromosomes X, Y, 13, 18, and 21 in a blastomere biopsied from day-3 embryos. Chromosomal analysis was performed with fluorescence in situ hybridization. Assisted zona hatching was performed on day-3 embryos from the control-group patients. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Embryo morphology, results of fluorescence in situ hybridization, clinical pregnancies, and implantation. RESULT(S) In the study group, a total of 61 embryos were analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization, and 55% were chromosomally abnormal. Embryo transfer with at least one normal embryo was performed in 10 cycles. Four clinical pregnancies resulted, with a 28.0% implantation rate. In the control group, 41 embryos were transferred in 17 cycles after the assisted zona hatching procedure, yielding four clinical pregnancies and an 11.9% implantation rate. CONCLUSION(S) Infertile patients classified as having a poor prognosis have a high percentage of chromosomally abnormal embryos. The advantage of selecting and transferring embryos with normal fluorescence in situ hybridization results has an immediate impact on implantation.


Fertility and Sterility | 1998

Chromosome abnormalities in embryos obtained after conventional in vitro fertilization and intracytoplasmic sperm injection

Santiago Munné; Carmen Márquez; Adrienne Reing; John Garrisi; Mina Alikani

OBJECTIVE To compare the rate of numerical chromosome abnormalities in embryos derived from bipronucleated zygotes produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) and conventional IVF. DESIGN Embryos were classified by maternal age and morphological and developmental characteristics to avoid bias when comparing chromosome abnormalities in ICSI and IVF embryos. SETTING The Institute for Reproductive Medicine and Science of Saint Barnabas Medical Center, West Orange, New Jersey. PATIENT(S) Seventy-nine couples undergoing IVF and 53 couples undergoing ICSI. INTERVENTION(S) Embryos donated for research were fully biopsied, and their cells were analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization with specific probes for chromosomes X, Y, 13, 18, and 21 and some with also a probe for chromosome 16. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Embryo chromosome abnormalities. RESULT(S) A total of 245 embryos obtained through conventional IVF and 136 embryos obtained through ICSI were analyzed. There were no statistical differences between the rates of numerical chromosomal abnormalities detected in the IVF (61%) and ICSI (52%) embryos analyzed. Regarding gonosomal aneuploidy, the same rate was found in both ICSI (1%) and IVF groups (2%). CONCLUSION(S) If the parents are chromosomally normal, the results indicate that, at the embryo level and before any embryo selection has occurred in utero, ICSI does not produce more numerical chromosomal abnormalities than conventional IVF.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2008

A new safe, simple and successful vitrification method for bovine and human blastocysts

James J Stachecki; John Garrisi; Sandro Sabino; Joao Pj Caetano; Klaus E. Wiemer; Jacques Cohen

This study examined a new method for vitrification of blastocysts that is safe, simple and easy to learn and use. Current vitrification techniques have shortcomings that include the use of dimethyl sulphoxide, one of the more toxic cryoprotectants, and minute containers that are difficult to handle and are usually open to contamination. Cell handling and loading times are very short, which allows no room for user-associated errors and increases the difficulty of the procedure. This study describes a method of vitrification without these shortcomings. Human and bovine blastocysts were exposed to a series of three cryoprotectant solutions and loaded into a 0.25 ml sterile straw, heat sealed at both ends and vitrified. This technique allowed sufficient time for cryoprotectant exposure, loading, sealing and vitrification. Research blastocysts were thawed, cultured for 24 h, and stained for cell viability. The majority survived and on average had few lysed cells. In clinical studies from three different centres, 81.4% of vitrified blastocysts were intact after thawing. Out of 43 transfers with 76 blastocysts replaced, 44.7% implanted, 43.4% yielded a fetal heart beat, and a total of 32 babies have been delivered or are ongoing. The overall clinical pregnancy per transfer rate was 60.4%. The high survival rates and clinical pregnancy rates obtained with this new, safe and easy-to-use vitrification procedure are encouraging.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2006

Cryopreservation of unfertilized human oocytes

James J Stachecki; Jacques Cohen; John Garrisi; Santiago Munné; Colleen Burgess; Steen Willadsen

Previous investigations revealed that choline-based freezing media developed in our laboratory were superior to conventional sodium-based media for storing mouse oocytes. This paper examines the ability of the choline-based medium CJ2 and a modified form of this medium, CJ3, to cryopreserve unfertilized human oocytes. Oocytes that were consented for research and matured overnight, as well as freshly collected, donor, mature metaphase II (MII) oocytes, were cryopreserved using choline-based media and an optimized slow-cooling protocol. The results showed higher survival and fertilization rates when CJ3 supplemented with 0.2 mmol/l sucrose was used as compared with CJ2 supplemented with either 0.1 mmol/l or 0.2 mmol/l sucrose. Freshly collected oocytes were more difficult to cryopreserve than those matured in vitro. Modification of the base medium proved to be one of the key factors in obtaining survival rates over 90%. Fertilization rates, embryo development, and genetic analysis of embryos resulting from control and frozen-thawed oocytes are provided. There appears to be a high correlation between chromosomal anomalies and abnormal morphology in embryos from thawed oocytes.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2006

Inhibition of human spermatozoa–zona pellucida binding by a combinatorially derived peptide from a synthetic target

George Pieczenik; John Garrisi; Jacques Cohen

Intact zona-free human oocytes were screened using a combinatorial peptide library selection protocol. Pieczenik Peptide Sequence 1 (PPS1) HEHRKRG binds human spermatozoa. A complementary and unique binding sequence HNSSLSPLATPA (PPS2) was developed from the first PPS1 ligand that binds to the human zona pellucida or oolemma. Cytoplasm-free zonae from unfertilized eggs were obtained and used as an assay system to test the effects of exposure to these two ligands. Spermatozoa were inserted into evacuated zonae and their behaviour and binding activity were assessed at regular intervals. The behaviour of spermatozoa exposed to PPS1 and unlabelled spermatozoa injected into unexposed zonae was similar as far as binding was concerned (50 and 54% binding), but PPS1 exposed spermatozoa had higher motility and displacement, marked by their escape from the zona pellucida. Zonae exposed to PPS2 inhibited the interaction between injected spermatozoa and the inside of the zona when compared with controls (8.3 and 53.8% attached respectively, P < 0.001). The sperm-zona pellucida interaction described in this paper is applied as a functional assay for molecular interactions of sperm binding and can be used to assess function for potential surface markers on gametes. It is shown here that a unique binding ligand (PPS2) can be synthesized from another complimentary ligand (PPS1) without the need for a known intermediate substrate. PPS1 and PPS2 may have properties that can be used to target processes involved in conception and assisted reproduction. A movie sequence taken approximately 30 min after injection of spermatozoa into empty human zonae pellucidae shows behaviour of non-manipulated spermatozoa into zonae not exposed or exposed to ligand. This may be purchased for viewing on the Internet at www.rbmonline.com/Article/2159 (free to web subscribers).


Human Reproduction | 2000

Cleavage anomalies in early human embryos and survival after prolonged culture in-vitro

Mina Alikani; Gloria Calderon; Giles Tomkin; John Garrisi; Magdalena Kokot; Jacques Cohen


Fertility and Sterility | 2005

Self-correction of chromosomally abnormal embryos in culture and implications for stem cell production

Santiago Munné; Esther Velilla; P. Colls; Mercedez Garcia Bermudez; Mohan C. Vemuri; Nury Steuerwald; John Garrisi; Jacques Cohen


Fertility and Sterility | 2009

Effect of infertility, maternal age, and number of previous miscarriages on the outcome of preimplantation genetic diagnosis for idiopathic recurrent pregnancy loss

John Garrisi; P. Colls; K.M. Ferry; Xhezong Zheng; Margarett G. Garrisi; Santiago Munné


Fertility and Sterility | 2000

Sperm deposition site during ICSI affects fertilization and development

Marlena Blake; John Garrisi; Giles Tomkin; Jacques Cohen

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Jacques Cohen

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Santiago Munné

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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James J Stachecki

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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M.G. Garrisi

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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Mina Alikani

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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N.A. Cekleniak

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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Adrienne Reing

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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Giles Tomkin

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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K.M. Ferry

Saint Barnabas Medical Center

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