M
Marcello Cocuzza
Researcher at University of São Paulo
Publications - 66
Citations - 2639
Marcello Cocuzza is an academic researcher from University of São Paulo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Male infertility & Infertility. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 65 publications receiving 2207 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcello Cocuzza include Cleveland Clinic.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Efficacy of Varicocelectomy in Improving Semen Parameters: New Meta-analytical Approach
Ashok Agarwal,Fnu Deepinder,Marcello Cocuzza,Rishi Agarwal,Robert Short,Edmund Sabanegh,Joel L. Marmar +6 more
TL;DR: Surgical varicocelectomy significantly improves semen parameters in infertile men with palpable varicocele and abnormal semen parameters, and this scoring system was developed to adjust and quantify for various potential sources of bias.
Journal ArticleDOI
Male Oxidative Stress Infertility (MOSI): Proposed Terminology and Clinical Practice Guidelines for Management of Idiopathic Male Infertility
Ashok Agarwal,Neel Parekh,Manesh Kumar Panner Selvam,Ralf Henkel,Ralf Henkel,Rupin Shah,Sheryl T. Homa,Ranjith Ramasamy,Edmund Y. Ko,Kelton Tremellen,Sandro C. Esteves,Sandro C. Esteves,Ahmad Majzoub,Ahmad Majzoub,Juan G. Alvarez,David K. Gardner,Channa N. Jayasena,Channa N. Jayasena,Jonathan Ramsay,Chak-Lam Cho,Ramadan A Saleh,Denny Sakkas,James M. Hotaling,Scott Lundy,Sarah C. Vij,Joel L. Marmar,Jaime Gosálvez,Edmund Sabanegh,Hyun Jun Park,Armand Zini,Parviz Kavoussi,Sava Micic,Ryan P. Smith,Gian Maria Busetto,Mustafa Emre Bakircioglu,Gerhard Haidl,Giancarlo Balercia,Nicolás Garrido Puchalt,Moncef Ben-Khalifa,Nicholas N. Tadros,Jackson Kirkman-Browne,Sergey I. Moskovtsev,Xuefeng Huang,Edson Borges,Daniel R. Franken,Natan Bar-Chama,Yoshiharu Morimoto,Kazuhisa Tomita,Vasan Satya Srini,Willem Ombelet,Elisabetta Baldi,Monica Muratori,Yasushi Yumura,Sandro La Vignera,Raghavender Kosgi,Marlon Martinez,Donald P. Evenson,Daniel Suslik Zylbersztejn,Matheus Roque,Marcello Cocuzza,Marcelo Vieira,Assaf Ben-Meir,Raoul Orvieto,Raoul Orvieto,Eliahu Levitas,Amir Wiser,Amir Wiser,Mohamed Arafa,Vineet Malhotra,Sijo Parekattil,Haitham Elbardisi,Luiz Carvalho,Rima Dada,Christophe Sifer,Pankaj Talwar,Ahmet Gudeloglu,Ahmed M A Mahmoud,Khaled Terras,Chadi Yazbeck,Bojanic Nebojsa,Damayanthi Durairajanayagam,Ajina Mounir,Linda G. Kahn,Saradha Baskaran,Rishma Pai,Donatella Paoli,Kristian Leisegang,Mohamed Reza Moein,Sonia Malik,Önder Yaman,Luna Samanta,Fouad Bayane,Sunil Jindal,Muammer Kendirci,Barış Altay,Dragoljub Perovic,Avi Harlev +96 more
TL;DR: Oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) can be a useful clinical biomarker for the classification of MOSI, as it takes into account the levels of both oxidants and reductants (antioxidants) and may provide a more targeted, reliable approach for administering antioxidant therapy while minimizing the risk of antioxidant overdose.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical relevance of oxidative stress and sperm chromatin damage in male infertility: an evidence based analysis
TL;DR: Evaluation of seminal ROS levels and extent of sperm DNA damage especially in an infertile male may help develop new therapeutic strategies and improve success of assisted reproductive techniques (ART).
Journal ArticleDOI
The epidemiology and etiology of azoospermia
TL;DR: The epidemiology and etiology of azoospermia is discussed in detail and a thorough literature survey was performed using the Medline, EMBASE, BIOSIS, and Cochrane databases, limiting the survey to clinical publications that were relevant to male infertility and azoOSpermia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Age related increase of reactive oxygen species in neat semen in healthy fertile men
Marcello Cocuzza,Marcello Cocuzza,Kelly S. Athayde,Kelly S. Athayde,Ashok Agarwal,Rakesh Sharma,Rodrigo Pagani,Antonio Marmo Lucon,Miguel Srougi,Jorge Hallak +9 more
TL;DR: Reactive oxygen species levels are significant higher in seminal ejaculates of healthy fertile men older than 40 years, suggesting that delayed fatherhood may reduce the chances of pregnancy as men become progressively less fertile with age.