Automated semen analysis: 'Zona pellucida preferred' sperm morphometry and straight-line velocity are related to pregnancy rate ion subfertile couples

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Abstract

Background: Standard semen analysis has low objectivity and reproducibility and is not closely related to fertility. We assess the prognostic value of automated measurements of sperm motility and morphology. Methods: During 1997-1999, 1191 infertile couples with no known absolute barrier to conception were assessed by conventional semen analysis, and automated measurements of average straight-line velocity (VSL) and the percentage of sperm with characteristics that conform to those of sperm which bind to the zona pellucida of the human oocyte (%Z). During follow-up to 2001, there were 336 natural pregnancies. Results: Only %Z, VSL and female age were independently significantly related to pregnancy rate by Cox regression analysis. Pregnancy rate was higher with above average %Z and VSL, indicating a continuous rather than a threshold relationship. The likelihood of pregnancy within 12 cycles can be evaluated for specific values of %Z, VSL and female age using the Cox regression model. Conclusions: The automated semen measures of sperm morphometry (%Z) and velocity (VSL) are related to pregnancy rates in subfertile couples and should assist clinicians in counselling subfertile patients about their prognosis for a natural pregnancy. Objective automated methods should replace the traditional manual assessments of semen quality.

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Garrett, C., Liu, D. Y., Clarke, G. N., Rushford, D. D., & Baker, H. W. G. (2003). Automated semen analysis: “Zona pellucida preferred” sperm morphometry and straight-line velocity are related to pregnancy rate ion subfertile couples. Human Reproduction, 18(8), 1643–1649. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deg306

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