1. Seminal Corynebacterium strains in infertile men with and without leucocytospermia.
- Author
-
Mashaly M, Masallat DT, Elkholy AA, Abdel-Hamid IA, and Mostafa T
- Subjects
- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Infertility, Male etiology, Male, Sperm Count, Sperm Motility, Young Adult, Corynebacterium isolation & purification, Infertility, Male microbiology, Semen microbiology
- Abstract
This study aimed to identify seminal Corynebacterium strains in infertile men with and without leucocytospermia. Semen samples from 60 infertile men were allocated into two equal groups: semen samples with leucocytospermia and semen samples without leucocytospermia. Semen culture for Corynebacterium species was carried out on Columbia agar medium confirmed by Gram-stained film and biochemical tests followed by analytical profile index biotyping and antibiotic susceptibility. Bacterial isolates were detected in 20/60 semen cultures (33.3%) as Corynebacteria, Staphylococci, Alpha haemolytic streptococci and E. coli. In all, 12/60 (20%) had Corynebacterium positive semen culture, whereas C. seminal was the major isolated species followed by C. amycolatum, C. jekium and C. urealyticum. There was nonsignificant difference between patients with/without Corynebacterium positive culture regarding sperm concentration and normal sperm morphology; however, in positive cultures sperm motility was significantly lower compared with negative cultures. Antimicrobial sensitivity among Corynebacteria strains was highest for vancomycin, rifampicin then imipenem, ampicillin + sulbactam, ciprofloxacin. It is concluded that positive semen cultures for different Corynebacteria species were demonstrated in infertile men, whereas Corynebacterium seminale was the most common isolated species. Vancomycin, rifampicin then imipenem and ampicillin + sulbactam are recommended as sensitive antibiotics., (© 2015 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF