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Charles L. Bormann

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  105
Citations -  1945

Charles L. Bormann is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 82 publications receiving 1468 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles L. Bormann include Texas College & Texas Tech University.

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Freeze-Dried Sperm Fertilization Leads to Full-Term Development in Rabbits

TL;DR: The results suggest that freeze-drying could be applied to preserve the spermatozoa from most other species, including human, and raises the question of whether rabbit sperm centrosomes survive freeze-Drying or are not essential for embryonic development.
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An automated smartphone-based diagnostic assay for point-of-care semen analysis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a low-cost smartphone accessory can be used for home-based male infertility screening and suggested that the integration of microfluidics, optical sensing accessories, and advances in consumer electronics, particularly smartphone capabilities, can make remote semen quality testing accessible to people in both developed and developing countries who have access to smartphones.
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Dynamic microfunnel culture enhances mouse embryo development and pregnancy rates

TL;DR: Dynamic microfunnel culture significantly improved embryo implantation and ongoing pregnancy rates over static culture to levels approaching that of in utero derived preimplantation embryos and has potential to alleviate many inefficiencies in embryo production.
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Cryopreserved embryo transfer is an independent risk factor for placenta accreta.

TL;DR: Cryopreserved ET is a strong independent risk factor for accreta among patients using IVF and/or ICSI, and a threshold endometrial thickness and a "safety window" of optimal peak E2 level are proposed for external validation.
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Use of energy substrates by various stage preimplantation pig embryos produced in vivo and in vitro.

TL;DR: The results indicate that pig embryos use glucose via glycolysis in significant amounts at all stages examined, regardless of embryo origin, and Krebs cycle metabolism of pyruvate, glutamine and glucose by in vivo- derived embryos was higher than that by in vitro-derived embryos.