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Adele De Palma

Researcher at University of Catania

Publications -  11
Citations -  643

Adele De Palma is an academic researcher from University of Catania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aneuploidy & Sperm. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 11 publications receiving 619 citations.

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Aneuploidy rate in spermatozoa of selected men with abnormal semen parameters

TL;DR: This study evaluated the rate of aneuploidy in the spermatozoa of selected patients with abnormal sperm parameters and found that patients with teratozoospermia or OAT have an increased rate of sperm aneuPLoidy, suggesting that teratoZpermia may be the critical sperm parameter associated with aneubloidy.
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Globozoospermia is associated with chromatin structure abnormalities: Case report

TL;DR: This is the first case report of round-headed sperm that has shown an elevated number of sperm with abnormal chromatin structure and DNA strand breaks, and it is reported here a study of the sperm DNA integrity and chromosome aneuploidy and diploidsy rates of a patient with 100% round- headed sperm.
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Lower sperm aneuploidy frequency is associated with high pregnancy rates in ICSI programmes.

TL;DR: This study showed that chromosomally abnormal sperm have a negative impact on ICSI outcome.
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High sperm aneuploidy rate in unselected infertile patients and its relationship with intracytoplasmic sperm injection outcome

TL;DR: This study has shown that unselected patients undergoing ICSI had an elevated sperm aneuploidy rate and Lack of pregnancy was associated with a tendency towards an increased aneuPloidy rates; however, pregnancy occurred even in the presence of an elevated semen aneuPLoidyrate.
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Morphologically normal spermatozoa of patients with secretory oligo-astheno-teratozoospermia have an increased aneuploidy rate.

TL;DR: The total aneuploidy rates of spermatozoa with normal or abnormal head shape from OAT patients were similar to each other and to that of abnormally shaped spermatozoon from normozoospermic men, but they were higher than the rate found in normally shaped spermutozoa of normal men.