D
Danilo Cimadomo
Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome
Publications - 166
Citations - 4083
Danilo Cimadomo is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 95 publications receiving 2473 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Correlation between standard blastocyst morphology, euploidy and implantation: an observational study in two centers involving 956 screened blastocysts
Antonio Capalbo,Laura Rienzi,Danilo Cimadomo,Roberta Maggiulli,T.A. Elliott,Graham Wright,Zsolt Peter Nagy,Filippo Ubaldi +7 more
TL;DR: This study provides knowledge for a better laboratory and clinical management of blastocyst stage PGS cycles suggesting that the commonly used parameters ofblastocyst evaluation are not good enough indicators to improve the selection among euploid embryos.
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Impact of Maternal Age on Oocyte and Embryo Competence
Danilo Cimadomo,Gemma Fabozzi,Alberto Vaiarelli,Nicolò Ubaldi,Filippo Maria Ubaldi,Laura Rienzi +5 more
TL;DR: The main strategies proposed to improve the management of advanced maternal age women in IVF: fertility preservation through oocyte cryopreservation to prevent aging; optimization of the ovarian stimulation and enhancement of embryo selection to limit its effects; and oocyte donation to circumvent its consequences.
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Genome-wide maps of recombination and chromosome segregation in human oocytes and embryos show selection for maternal recombination rates
Christian S. Ottolini,Louise Newnham,Antonio Capalbo,Senthilkumar A. Natesan,Hrishikesh A. Joshi,Danilo Cimadomo,Darren K. Griffin,Karen Sage,Michael C. Summers,Alan R. Thornhill,Elizabeth A. Housworth,Alex Herbert,Laura Rienzi,Filippo Ubaldi,Alan H. Handyside,Eva Hoffmann +15 more
TL;DR: This work generates genome-wide maps of crossovers and chromosome segregation patterns by recovering all three products of single female meioses, and uncovers a new reverse chromosome segregation pattern in which both homologs separate their sister chromatids at meiosis I.
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Chromosome errors in human eggs shape natural fertility over reproductive life span.
Jennifer R. Gruhn,Agata P. Zielinska,Vallari Shukla,Robert Blanshard,Robert Blanshard,Antonio Capalbo,Danilo Cimadomo,Dmitry Nikiforov,Dmitry Nikiforov,Andrew Chi-Ho Chan,Louise Newnham,Ivan Vogel,Catello Scarica,Marta Krapchev,Deborah M. Taylor,Stine Gry Kristensen,Junping Cheng,Erik Ernst,Anne Mette Bay Bjørn,Lotte Berdiin Colmorn,Martyn Blayney,Kay Elder,Joanna Liss,Geraldine M. Hartshorne,Marie Louise Grøndahl,Laura Rienzi,Filippo Ubaldi,Rajiv C. McCoy,Krzysztof Lukaszuk,Krzysztof Lukaszuk,Claus Andersen,Melina Schuh,Eva Hoffmann +32 more
TL;DR: The authors show that chromosome structure erodes only with advancing age, acting as a “molecular clock” for reproductive senescence, and suggest that chromosomal errors originating in oocytes determine the curve of natural fertility in humans.
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Follicular versus luteal phase ovarian stimulation during the same menstrual cycle (DuoStim) in a reduced ovarian reserve population results in a similar euploid blastocyst formation rate: new insight in ovarian reserve exploitation.
Filippo Maria Ubaldi,Antonio Capalbo,Alberto Vaiarelli,Danilo Cimadomo,Silvia Colamaria,Carlo Alviggi,Elisabetta Trabucco,Roberta Venturella,Gábor Vajta,Laura Rienzi +9 more
TL;DR: Stimulation with an identical protocol in the FP and LP of the same menstrual cycle resulted in a similar number of blastocysts in patients with reduced ovarian response, thus increasing the number of patients undergoing transfer per menstrual cycle.