1. Sperm deoxyribonucleic acid damage in normozoospermic men is related to age and sperm progressive motility.
- Author
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Belloc S, Benkhalifa M, Cohen-Bacrie M, Dalleac A, Amar E, and Zini A
- Subjects
- Age Factors, DNA Fragmentation, Fertility, Flow Cytometry, Humans, In Situ Nick-End Labeling, Infertility, Male pathology, Infertility, Male physiopathology, Male, Paternal Age, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Aging pathology, DNA Damage, Infertility, Male etiology, Sperm Motility, Spermatozoa pathology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate sperm DNA fragmentation in normozoospermic male partners of couples undergoing infertility evaluation., Design: Retrospective cohort study., Setting: Clinical andrology laboratory., Patient(s): A total of 1,974 consecutive normozoospermic men selected from a larger cohort of 4,345 consecutive, nonazoospermic men presenting for infertility evaluation., Intervention(s): None., Main Outcome Measure(s): Clinical parameters, conventional semen parameters, and sperm DNA fragmentation assessed by flow cytometry-based TUNEL assay and reported as percent sperm DNA fragmentation (%SDF)., Result(s): The mean (± SD) %SDF and the proportion of men with high %SDF (>30%) were significantly lower in the normozoospermic compared with the entire cohort of 4,345 evaluable infertile men (17.6% ± 10.1% vs. 20.7% ± 12.4% and 11% vs. 20%, respectively). In the group of 1,974 normozoospermic men, %SDF was positively correlated with paternal age (r = 0.17) and inversely correlated with progressive motility (r = -0.26). In the subset of normozoospermic men with sperm parameters above the 50th percentile (≥ 73 × 10(6) sperm/mL, ≥ 55% progressive motility, and ≥ 14% normal forms, World Health Organization 2010 guidelines), 5% (4 of 83) had elevated %SDF (>30%)., Conclusion(s): In this large cohort of normozoospermic men presenting for infertility evaluation, DNA fragmentation level is related to sperm motility and paternal age, and 11% of these men have high levels of sperm DNA fragmentation. Furthermore, the data indicate that a nonnegligible proportion (5%) of normozoospermic men with high-normal sperm parameters may also have significant sperm DNA fragmentation., (Copyright © 2014 American Society for Reproductive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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