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Journal ArticleDOI

The evaluation of morphological characteristics of human spermatozoa according to stricter criteria

TLDR
It can be concluded that the method developed in the laboratory and which resulted in the use of stricter criteria for the evaluation of sperm morphology is a practical, reliable and repeatable method and has a good prognostic value for the prediction of expected IVF fertilization, the hamster test and hemizona assay.
Abstract
The evaluation of the morphology of human spermatozoa varies widely between and sometimes even within laboratories. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the method that has been developed in our laboratory and which resulted in the use of stricter criteria for the evaluation of sperm morphology is a practical, reliable and repeatable method and to establish the within and between observer variations. The criteria used for a 'normal' spermatozoon are based on the appearance of spermatozoa found in the mucus of the upper endocervical canal. The results of the morphological evaluations of 26 samples by four observers were statistically analysed by various methods. The method of Barnett showed a high degree of relative accuracy between observers with error variances of between 2.89 and 19.67 as well as high Spearman rank correlation coefficients of between 0.8675 and 0.6537 (P less than 0.0003). The Spearman correlation coefficient for 15 duplicate evaluations by one observer was 0.9650 (P less than 0.0001) while the coefficients of variation for repeated evaluations of single samples were also within acceptable limits. Based on these results, the method described in this article allows comparable and reliable results between and within observers to be obtained. From this and other studies it can be concluded that the method also has a good prognostic value for the prediction of expected IVF fertilization, the hamster test and hemizona assay.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between sperm morphology and rates of fertilization, pregnancy and spontaneous abortion in an in-vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection programme.

TL;DR: It is found that fertilization capacity is not necessarily impaired even in this 'poor prognosis' group of men, and fertilization cut-off values for conventional IVF to be slightly different from those of the Kruger group (10 and 5%, compared to 14 and 5%).
Journal ArticleDOI

Regional differences in semen qualities in the Baltic region.

TL;DR: The sperm counts of the Estonian and Lithuanian men investigated here are higher than recently shown for Norwegian, Danish, Estonia and Finnish men, and comparisons should be cautiously drawn as the groups are not completely comparable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sperm morphology: assessment, pathophysiology, clinical relevance, and state of the art in 2017.

TL;DR: Sperm morphology assessment has very poor sensitivity and specificity in the diagnosis of infertility and in assisted reproductive technology, and there is very little evidence that indices of multiple sperm defects [sperm deformity index, teratozoospermia index, and multiple abnormalities index] are relevant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sperm morphology assessment using strict criteria and male fertility under in-vivo conditions of conception

TL;DR: The pregnancy rate under in-vivo conditions was significantly higher when semen samples had a better sperm morphology, with significant differences for thresholds at 4, 7 and 14% of strictly normal forms.
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