Skip to main content
ImmuneCited

Controlling chronic low-grade inflammation to improve follicle development and survival.

Ziwei Yang, Zijuan Tang, Xiuping Cao, Qi Xie, Chuan Hu et al.
Review American journal of reproductive immunology (New York, N.Y. : 1989) 2020 47 次引用
PubMed DOI
<\/script>\n
`; }, get iframeSnippet() { const domain = 'immunecited.com'; const params = 'pmid\u003D32395847'; return ``; }, get activeSnippet() { return this.method === 'script' ? this.scriptSnippet : this.iframeSnippet; }, copySnippet() { navigator.clipboard.writeText(this.activeSnippet).then(() => { this.copied = true; setTimeout(() => { this.copied = false; }, 2000); }); } }" @keydown.escape.window="open = false" @click.outside="open = false">

Embed This Widget

Style



      
      
    

Widget powered by . Free, no account required.

Study Design

研究类型
Review
研究人群
None
干预措施
Controlling chronic low-grade inflammation to improve follicle development and survival. None
对照组
None
主要结局
None
效应方向
Mixed
偏倚风险
Unclear

Abstract

Chronic low-grade inflammation is one cause of follicle development disturbance. Chronic inflammation exists in pathological conditions such as premature ovarian failure, physiological aging of the ovaries, and polycystic ovary syndrome. Inflammation of the whole body can affect oocytes via the follicle microenvironment, oxidative stress, and GM-CSF. Many substances without toxic side-effects extracted from natural organisms have gradually gained researchers' attention. Recently, chitosan oligosaccharide, resveratrol, anthocyanin, and melatonin have been found to contribute to an improvement in inflammation. This review discusses the interrelationships between chronic low-grade inflammation and follicle development, the underlying mechanisms, and methods that may improve follicle development by controlling the level of chronic low-grade inflammation.

简要概述

This review discusses the interrelationships between chronic low‐grade inflammation and follicle development, the underlying mechanisms, and methods that may improve follicles development by controlling the level of chronic low-grade inflammation.

Used In Evidence Reviews

Similar Papers