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Chorionic villus culture for prenatal diagnosis of chromosome defects: Reduction of the long‐term cultivation time
45
Citations
13
References
1989
Year
FertilityGeneticsGynecologyReproductive BiologyEmbryologyReproductive PhysiologyChorionic Villus CultivationReproductive MedicineAttachment EfficiencyPublic HealthInfertilityChromosome DefectsChorionic VilliPrenatal DiagnosisEmbryonic DevelopmentPrenatal TestingHuman ReproductionDevelopmental BiologyPathogenesisIn Vitro TechniquesChorionic Villus CultureMedicine
We report in detail two series of chorionic villus cultivation for prenatal chromosomal diagnosis. Chorionic villi were sampled from both first- and second-trimester pregnancies. One hundred cultures were treated with trypsin-EDTA for 2 h and collagenase overnight, (method A) and 100 were treated with trypsin-EDTA for 1 h and collagenase for 2 h (method B). Using short-term enzymatic digestion, the cultivation time was reduced from 14 days to 6 days. Sufficient amounts of metaphases of good quality were present in 93 per cent of primary cultures harvested in situ, whereas enough metaphases of sufficiently good quality were in most cases present only after subcultivation of the cultures using method A. The decrease in cultivation time obtained is probably due to a higher yield of viable cells in monocellular suspension, an increased attachment efficiency, and a more rapid attachment of single cells (within 24 h).
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