Analysis of structural and numerical chromosome abnormalities in sperm of normal men and carriers of constitutional chromosome aberrations. A review

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Abstract

Sperm chromosome analysis offers the opportunity to gather information about the origin of chromosome aberrations in human germ cells. Over the last 20 years more than 20,000 sperm chromosome complements from normal donors and almost 6000 spermatozoa from men with constitutional chromosome aberrations (inversions, translocations) have been analyzed for structural and numerical chromosome abnormalities, as well as for segregation of the constitutional chromosome aberrations after the sperm had penetrated hamster oocytes. On the other hand, it took only 6 years to screen more than 3 million mature spermatozoa from healthy probands for disomy rates of 20 autosomes (chromosomes 19 and 22 not evaluated) and the sex chromosomes, and for diploidy rates by in situ hybridization techniques. In the present paper the results arising from both methods are compiled and compared.

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Guttenbach, M., Engel, W., & Schmid, M. (1997). Analysis of structural and numerical chromosome abnormalities in sperm of normal men and carriers of constitutional chromosome aberrations. A review. Human Genetics. Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/s004390050459

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