SPERM MORPHOLOGY AND CHROMATIN CONDENSATION BEFORE AND AFTER SEMEN PROCESSING Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Semen analysis constitutes the most important investigation of male infertility. However, the true anomalies present in defective sperm cells have been only partially characterized. The integrity of the sperm chromatin may play the most important role, particularly in ICSI, where most of the natural selection mechanisms are bypassed. This study was carried out to characterize sperm morphology (strict criteria), to evaluate chromatin condensation and sperm count in native semen as well as after semen preparation by the swim-up technique, and to eventually evaluate any correlation between these parameters. Semen from 90 men was analyzed for the above parameters in both the fresh and processed semen. Whereas the sperm count decreased after sperm preparation by the swim-up technique in comparison to the value in the fresh semen (p < .001), there was an increase in the percentage of morphologically normal (p < .001) and chromatin-condensed sperm (p = .99). However, there was no correlation between sperm morphology, chromatin condensation, and sperm count either in the fresh or in the processed semen samples. These results suggest that sperm morphology, sperm count, and chromatin condensation are independent parameters that should be evaluated separately in the assessment of male fertility in an assisted reproduction program.

publication date

  • January 2000