Effect of drugs used in general anesthesia on oocyte and embryo quality in Iraqi infertile females undergoing intracytoplasmic sperm injection

Abstract

Various types of anesthetic techniques were described for oocyte recovery. Different anesthetic agents have been used with different effects on oocyte quality and embryonic development and studies on the potential toxicity of general anesthesia ended up with conflicting results. Many experiments as well as human studies documented the existence of anesthetic agents in the follicular fluid (FF) with possible adverse effects on the oocyte quality and subsequent embryo development. Ketamine and remifentanil were used for the studied groups to compare oocytes and embryos characteristic of infertile women during oocytes retrieval under general anesthesia: one group receiving ketamine, midazolam, and propofol and the other group receiving remifentanil, midazolam and propofol. 60 infertile females were undergoing intracytoplasmic sperm injection categorized in two groups, group I received midazolam, remifentanil and propofol; whereas, group II received midazolam, ketamine and propofol. There was highly significant difference in mean abnormal oocyte between ketamine and remifentanil groups. Grade III embryos were significantly limited to ketamine group. FF ketamine and remifentanil were not significantly correlated to any of oocyte characteristics or embryo characteristics. Anesthetic agents, ketamine and remifentanil, were detected in the FF of infertile women and within recommended doses. Ketamine resulted in adverse effects on oocyte and embryo quality in comparison with remifentanil represented by greater percentage of abnormal oocytes and that bad quality embryos were limited to ketamine group.