| Literature DB >> 29564308 |
Amena Khatun1, Md Saidur Rahman1, Myung-Geol Pang1.
Abstract
The evaluation of infertility in males consists of physical examination and semen analyses. Standardized semen analyses depend on the descriptive analysis of sperm motility, morphology, and concentration, with a threshold level that must be surpassed to be considered a fertile spermatozoon. Nonetheless, these conventional parameters are not satisfactory for clinicians since 25% of infertility cases worldwide remain unexplained. Therefore, newer tests methods have been established to investigate sperm physiology and functions by monitoring characteristics such as motility, capacitation, the acrosome reaction, reactive oxygen species, sperm DNA damage, chromatin structure, zona pellucida binding, and sperm-oocyte fusion. After the introduction of intracytoplasmic sperm injection technique, sperm maturity, morphology, and aneuploidy conditions have gotten more attention for investigating unexplained male infertility. In the present article, recent advancements in research regarding the utilization of male fertility prediction tests and their role and accuracy are reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Infertility; Semen analysis; Spermatozoa
Year: 2018 PMID: 29564308 PMCID: PMC5854897 DOI: 10.5468/ogs.2018.61.2.179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obstet Gynecol Sci ISSN: 2287-8572
Standard reference values for semen characteristics World Health Organization (WHO) (2010)
| Volume | 2 mL or more |
|---|---|
| pH | 7.0–8.0 |
| Sperm concentration | 15 million or more/mL |
| Total No. of spermatozoa | 39 million or more spermatozoa/ejaculate |
| Motility | 40% or more progressive motility or 32% (a+b) (within 1 hour after ejaculation) |
| Morphology | 4.0% or more (normal forms) |
| Viability | 58% or more live spermatozoa |
| Leukocytes (106/mL) | <1.0 |
| Mixed antiglobulin reaction | Less than 50% spermatozoa with adherent particle |
Source: WHO laboratory manual for the examination of human semen and sperm-cervical mucus interaction. 5th edition. Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization; 2010.
Fig. 1Effects of sperm treatment based on TEST-yolk buffer (TYB), Biggers-Whitten-Whittingham (BWW), and human serum albumin (HSA) on the outcome of the sperm penetration assay (SPA). (A) Effect of TYB and BWW on the outcome of SPA tests. (B) Human serum albumin concentrations in fertilization media. (C) Human serum albumin concentration in swim up method. The figure has been modified, and citing the original source published by Oh et al. [59].
PI, penetration index; PR, plasticity range.