| Literature DB >> 17208395 |
Lindsay Gillan1, Tom Kroetsch, W M Chis Maxwell, Gareth Evans.
Abstract
The performance of frozen-thawed spermatozoa from 10 Holstein bulls in a range of in vitro diagnostic tests and the relationship with adjusted in vivo fertility data was determined. The tests included an assessment of motility (subjective and computer-assisted), morphology, concentration, viability, acrosomal and chromatin integrity conducted immediately post-thaw and after swim-up, in conjunction with membrane status (CTC staining) and migration in an artificial cervical mucus. Adjusted in vivo fertility correlated with subjectively assessed post-thaw motility (r=0.672, p=0.033), post-thaw straight-line velocity (r=0.636, p=0.048), post-thaw sperm morphology (r=-0.762, p=0.010), post-thaw sperm viability (r=0.635, p=0.048), the concentration of spermatozoa after swim-up (r=0.649, p=0.042), sperm morphology after swim-up (r=-0.687, p=0.028), the number of spermatozoa migrating 10mm into artificial cervical mucus (r=0.632, p=0.050) and the distance migrated by the vanguard spermatozoon in artificial mucus (r=0.701, p=0.024). A stepwise regression analysis identified tests which, when combined, produced models with a strong correlation (R(2)>0.9) to fertility.Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17208395 DOI: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.12.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Reprod Sci ISSN: 0378-4320 Impact factor: 2.145