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Ali Reza Talebi

Researcher at Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services

Publications -  101
Citations -  2108

Ali Reza Talebi is an academic researcher from Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences and Health Services. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sperm & Male infertility. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 85 publications receiving 1601 citations. Previous affiliations of Ali Reza Talebi include Yazd University.

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Etiologies of sperm oxidative stress.

TL;DR: Spermatozoa need small amounts of ROS to acquire the ability of nuclear maturation regulation and condensation to fertilize the oocyte, indicating that oxidative stress is one of the main cause of DNA damage in the germ cells, then there should be good reason for antioxidant therapy in these conditions.
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The effect of zinc oxide nanoparticles on mouse spermatogenesis

TL;DR: Zinc oxide nanoparticles act as testicular toxicant and further studies are needed to establish its mechanism of action upon spermatogenesis.
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Effects of ethanol consumption on chromatin condensation and DNA integrity of epididymal spermatozoa in rat.

TL;DR: The results showed that ethanol consumption disturbs sperm motility, nuclear maturity and DNA integrity of spermatozoa in rat, and this may be one possible cause of infertility following ethanol consumption.
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Effect of varicocele on chromatin condensation and dna integrity of ejaculated spermatozoa using cytochemical tests

TL;DR: The results showed that thevaricocele samples contain a higher proportion of spermatozoa with abnormal DNA and immature chromatin than those from fertile men as well as infertile men without varicocele.
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Cytochemical evaluation of sperm chromatin and DNA integrity in couples with unexplained recurrent spontaneous abortions

TL;DR: It was showed that in the cases of RSA, slow motility had a significant reduction in comparison with controls and also spermatozoa of men from RSA group had less chromatin condensation and poorer DNA integrity than spermatozosa that obtained from fertile men with no history of RSA.