P
Paul Devroey
Researcher at Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Publications - 527
Citations - 42194
Paul Devroey is an academic researcher from Vrije Universiteit Brussel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intracytoplasmic sperm injection & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 104, co-authored 526 publications receiving 39887 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Devroey include Free University of Brussels & Siemens.
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Ongoing pregnancies and birth after intracytoplasmic sperm injection with frozen-thawed epididymal spermatozoa.
Paul Devroey,Sherman J. Silber,Zsolt Peter Nagy,Jiaen Liu,Herman Tournaye,Hubert Joris,Greta Verheyen,Andre Van Steirteghem +7 more
TL;DR: In seven patients who did not become pregnant following microsurgical epididymal sperm aspiration and intracytoplasmic sperm injection, it would appear mandatory to cryopreserve supernumerary spermatozoa during a MESA in order to avoid subsequent further scrotal surgery.
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The evolution and outcome of pregnancies from oocyte donation
TL;DR: Women who become pregnant after oocyte donation and especially those with ovarian failure should be considered as high-risk obstetric patients.
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Hysteroscopic septum resection in patients with recurrent abortions or infertility.
TL;DR: It seems that the hysteroscopic treatment of uterine septum has a beneficial effect on pregnancy outcome, and a septate uterus does not seem to be an infertility factor.
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Cryopreserved-thawed human embryo transfer: spontaneous natural cycle is superior to human chorionic gonadotropin-induced natural cycle.
Human M. Fatemi,Dimitra Kyrou,Claire Bourgain,Etienne Van den Abbeel,Georg Griesinger,Paul Devroey +5 more
TL;DR: The study was terminated early, when a prespecified interim analysis found a significantly higher ongoing pregnancy rate in the spontaneous LH group as compared with the hCG group.
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Report on a consecutive series of 581 children born after blastomere biopsy for preimplantation genetic diagnosis
Ingeborg Liebaers,Sonja Desmyttere,Willem Verpoest,M. De Rycke,Catherine Staessen,Karen Sermon,Paul Devroey,Patrick Haentjens,Maryse Bonduelle +8 more
TL;DR: Embryo biopsy does not add risk factors to the health of singleton children born after PGD or PGS, but the perinatal death rate in multiple pregnancies is such that both caution and long-term follow-up are required.