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Pasquale Patrizio

Researcher at Yale University

Publications -  255
Citations -  9367

Pasquale Patrizio is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 223 publications receiving 7970 citations. Previous affiliations of Pasquale Patrizio include Mount Sinai St. Luke's and Mount Sinai Roosevelt & California State University, Long Beach.

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American Society of Clinical Oncology Recommendations on Fertility Preservation in Cancer Patients

TL;DR: Fertility preservation is often possible in people undergoing treatment for cancer and should be considered as early as possible during treatment planning, to preserve the full range of options.
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Infertility around the globe: new thinking on gender, reproductive technologies and global movements in the 21st century

TL;DR: An overview of what is known about global infertility, ART and changing gender relations is presented, posing five key questions: why is infertility an ongoing global reproductive health problem, what are the gender effects of infertility, and are they changing over time?
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Long-term survival of human spermatogonial stem cells in mouse testes

TL;DR: Xenogeneic transplantation of human germ cells using mice as recipients is feasible and could be used as a biological assay system to further characterize human spermatogonial stem cells.
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An empirical estimate of carrier frequencies for 400+ causal Mendelian variants: results from an ethnically diverse clinical sample of 23,453 individuals.

TL;DR: This study of a large, ethnically diverse clinical sample provides the most accurate measurements to date of carrier frequencies for hundreds of recessive alleles and provides support for a pan-ethnic screening paradigm that minimizes the use of “racial” categories by the physician, as recommended by recent guidelines.
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Congenital absence of the vas deferens. The fertilizing capacity of human epididymal sperm.

TL;DR: This work attempted to determine whether human sperm that had never passed through the epididymis could fertilize eggs in vitro and whether the technique could be used for men with congenital absence of the vas deferens.