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Brian D Acacio

Researcher at University of Southern California

Publications -  5
Citations -  449

Brian D Acacio is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Embryo transfer & Intention-to-treat analysis. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 279 citations.

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Preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy versus morphology as selection criteria for single frozen-thawed embryo transfer in good-prognosis patients: a multicenter randomized clinical trial.

TL;DR: There was a significant increase in OPR per embryo transfer with the use of PGT-A in the subgroup of women aged 35-40 years who had two or more embryos that could be biopsied, but this was not significant when analyzed by ITT.
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Evaluation of a large cohort of men presenting for a screening semen analysis

TL;DR: No decline in sperm density was revealed in semen collected by men presenting for an initial screening semen analysis, and the hypothesis that sperm concentration is declining was supported.
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Human chorionic gonadotropin from day 2 spent embryo culture media and its relationship to embryo development

TL;DR: The ability to detect hCG from day 2 spent culture media may be used as a marker for embryo competence and the correlation analysis revealed that the concentration of hCG was independent of embryo developmental status.
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Pharmacokinetics of dehydroepiandrosterone and its metabolites after long-term daily oral administration to healthy young men

TL;DR: Although the pharmacokinetics of DHEA and its metabolites are not altered, sustained baseline elevation of ADG, a distal DHT metabolite, raises concerns about the potential negative impact of D HEA supplementation on the prostate gland.
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The significance of polycystic-appearing ovaries versus normalappearing ovaries in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome

TL;DR: Women with PCos and polycystic-appearing ovaries do not demonstrate any definitive serum hormonal differences compared with women with PCOS and normal-appearance ovaries, and insulin resistance or sensitivity was not significantly different in both groups.