1. Cryogenic Preservation of Low-Quality Human Semen
- Author
-
W. K. Won, T. Ohono, Rihachi Iizuka, S. Kaneko, H. K. Lee, Takahisa Oda, Y. Izumi, and Toshifumi Kobayashi
- Subjects
Cryopreservation ,Glycerol ,Male ,Chromatography ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,urogenital system ,Semen ,Biology ,Sperm bank ,Sperm ,Dilution ,Endocrinology ,Pellet ,Botany ,Centrifugation, Density Gradient ,Sperm Motility ,Humans ,Poloxalene ,Percoll ,Sperm motility ,Semen Preservation - Abstract
The article describes the technical strategies for clinical cryogenic preservation of low-quality human semen. To compensate for sperm dilution resulting from the use of a cryogenic medium, ejaculated semen was concentrated before freezing by means of continuous-step density gradient centrifugation. Freezing was simplified by employing the carbon dioxide pellet method with KS-II cryogenic medium, which contains Pluronic F-68, a nonionic detergent, to solubilize egg yolk (a major cryogenic protectant). Semen of less than 50% motility (n = 23) was processed and then cryogenically preserved. Sperm concentration was increased by a factor of 1.8 +/- 0.96 (n = 23). Sperm motility was improved from 35.9% +/- 13.9% to 69.4% +/- 10.8%. Even after thawing 59.4% +/- 17.5% motility remained, with a mean survival rate of 85% +/- 14%. The concentration of sperm and improved sperm motility by the use of the continuous-step density gradient and the high survival rate ensured by the carbon dioxide pellet method with KS-II cryogenic medium compensated for the lowering of sperm quality during cryogenic preservation.
- Published
- 1990