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Semen analysis

About: Semen analysis is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 4909 publications have been published within this topic receiving 143225 citations.


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TL;DR: The effects of GnRH antagonist administration to men in a protocol simulating a likely male contraceptive regimen combined with a low dose of testosterone were studied, finding that sperm counts and serum gonadotropin levels were suppressed.
Abstract: GnRH antagonists suppress pituitary and gonadal function by competing with endogenous GnRH for binding to receptors on pituitary gonadotrophs. We studied the effects of GnRH antagonist administration to men in a protocol simulating a likely male contraceptive regimen combined with a low dose of testosterone. The GnRH antagonist Nal-Glu was given daily (10 mg, sc) for 20 weeks to eight normal men, and a low dose of testosterone enanthate (25 mg, sc) was given every week. Sperm counts started declining during week 4, and complete azoospermia was reached within 6–12 weeks in six of the eight subjects. Subjects 7 and 8, whose sperm counts and serum gonadotropin levels were not suppressed after 10 weeks, were given 20 mg Nal-Glu starting at week 10. One became azoospermic at week 16, while the other's total sperm counts continued declining and reached a nadir of 1.4 million by week 20. Sperm motility and viability in this subject were completely suppressed after week 14. Sperm counts returned to baseline level...

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Diluting dog semen samples to 50 x 10(6) ml(-1) with physiological saline solution and scanning 30 frames at a frame rate of 60 frames/s are the set-up parameters proposed to obtain objective and standardized canine semen motility results using the HTR Ceros 12.1.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest that even after prolonged use of extremely high doses of anabolic steroids, sperm production may return to normal and percentages of motile and normally formed sperm were significantly reduced in bodybuilders compared with normal volunteers.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Zhiling Li1, Qiong-lin Lin1, Rong-ju Liu1, Wanfen Xiao1, Wanmin Liu1 
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cryopreservation results in cryodamage to human spermatozoa, possibly through the mechanism of ROS, and appropriate ascorbate or catalase supplementation of cryoprotective medium restrains ROS levels and the resultant cryodammy.
Abstract: Human semen cryopreservation in the clinical management of male infertility is complicated by cryodamage to spermatozoa. We aimed to clarify the full pattern of cryodamage and evaluate the protective effects of ascorbate and catalase on cryopreserved spermatozoa. Semen samples were collected from 30 fertile males. Each sample was divided into 6 groups: fresh semen, cryopreserved semen without treatment, and samples cryopreserved with ascorbate (300 or 600 μM) or catalase (200 or 400 IU/mL). Spermatozoa were examined for their viability, motility, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), apoptosis (positive for annexin V and negative for propidium iodide [ie, Ann(+)/PI(-)]), and DNA damage (Olive tail moment [OTM]) in the presence or absence of ascorbate or catalase during cryopreservation. In comparison with the fresh spermatozoa, there was a significant decrease in the viability, motility, and MMP but increase in Ann(+)/PI(-) and OTM in the cryopreserved spermatozoa (P < .01 and P < .05, respectively). Concurrently, ROS levels in the postthaw spermatozoa also increased significantly, and this elevation was well correlated with the quality variations of postthaw spermatozoa (P < .01 for all). Ascorbate (300 μM) and catalase (200 and 400 IU/mL) reduced the ROS levels in postthaw spermatozoa significantly, compared with those in the control (P < .05). Furthermore, these antioxidants also prevented those characteristics from being adversely affected (P < .05). This study demonstrated that cryopreservation results in cryodamage to human spermatozoa, possibly through the mechanism of ROS. Appropriate ascorbate or catalase supplementation of cryoprotective medium restrains ROS levels and the resultant cryodamage.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study suggests that this assessment is carried out during a first andrological check-up or for epidemiological or research studies, rather than in the routine management of infertile couples for assisted reproductive technologies, because of the particular impact of this condition on sperm morphogenesis.
Abstract: Study question Can a standardized assessment of abnormal human sperm morphology provide additional useful information by identifying men with more severe disturbances in different types of abnormalities? Summary answer Definition-based categorization of sperm head, midpiece and tail defects has shown how differently these abnormalities are distributed in fertile men and other groups of men, thus providing high and low thresholds, a starting point for diagnosis or research purposes. What is known already Several recent studies have reported indisputable genetic origins for various sperm defects. A few studies have also identified associations between environmental factors and low percentages of morphologically normal spermatozoa. Nevertheless, with the exception of rare situations in which the vast majority of spermatozoa have specific, easily characterized defects, such as 'globozoospermia', little attention has been paid to the description and precise quantification of human sperm abnormalities. The lack of standardization in the phenotyping of sperm morphological defects by conventional microscopy is a limiting factor for diagnosis and for intra- or inter-observer or centre consistency in studies investigating the causal factors and possible functional consequences of the abnormalities detected. There are currently no baseline data for abnormalities of sperm morphology based on a standardized classification, in the general population, among fertile or other groups of men. Study design, size, duration This study is based on detailed sperm abnormality datasets acquired by a standardized classification method, from several groups of men, over the same 5-year period. Participants/materials, setting, methods We studied cross-sectional data from fertile men (n = 926), male partners from infertile couples (n = 1747) and testicular cancer patients (n = 239). We used a standardized classification to analyse Shorr-stained slides, taking into account all the abnormalities encountered. Main results and the role of chance Most sperm defects were significantly more frequent in infertile than in fertile men, with 20-30% of infertile men having frequencies of abnormalities above the 95th percentile in fertile men for 9 out of the 15 categories of abnormalities. Interestingly, several head abnormalities were significantly more frequent in patients with testicular cancer than in infertile men, highlighting the particular impact of this condition on sperm morphogenesis. We used the 95th percentile in fertile men as the lower threshold and the 99th percentile in infertile men as an extreme upper threshold, for the classification of morphological abnormality frequencies into three levels: low, intermediate and high. The assessment of several semen samples, with or without a genetic background, for abnormal sperm morphology, based on the percentage of normal spermatozoa, a teratozoospermia index, and the detailed profile of abnormalities categorized according to the three levels proposed, has highlighted the value of detailed phenotyping for diagnosis and research purposes. Limitations, reasons for caution The thresholds proposed for the various categories of sperm abnormality should be considered relative rather than absolute, owing to the known sampling error related to the limited number of spermatozoa assessed per sample, or when studying the general population or populations from regions other than Western Europe. The standardized assessment of abnormal sperm morphology requires time and experience. We therefore suggest that this assessment is carried out during a first andrological check-up or for epidemiological or research studies, rather than in the routine management of infertile couples for assisted reproductive technologies. Wider implications of the findings The study design used for the fertile group of men was similar to that previously used for the WHO reference values, providing a rationale for considering the 95th percentile in fertile men as the level below which abnormalities may be considered to occur at a frequency representing random background variations of a normal spermiogenesis process. The crude frequencies obtained, and the three levels of abnormality frequency proposed for each standardized category of sperm defect, provide baseline data useful for diagnosis and a starting point for future studies aiming to identify associations with genetic or environmental factors. Study funding/competing interests Part of this study was supported by contract BMH4-CT96-0314 from the European Union. The authors have no competing interests to declare.

115 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023166
2022338
2021229
2020245
2019202
2018233