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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Spermiogram and sperm head morphometry assessed by multivariate cluster analysis results during adolescence (12-18 years) and the effect of varicocele
Patricia CampsAnthony ValverdeCarles SolerAlmudena García-molinaFernando Vásquezsubject
Male0301 basic medicineMultivariate statisticsMultivariate analysisVaricocelelcsh:RC870-923:MEDICINE::Morphology cell biology pathology [Research Subject Categories]0302 clinical medicineVaricoceleCluster AnalysisChildsubpopulationreproductive and urinary physiologySperm motilityeducation.field_of_study030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicinemedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral MedicineSpermatozoaseminal qualitySperm MotilityCASA-Morph systemSecrecionesendocrine systemAdolescentUrologyPopulationInvited Original ArticleSemen analysisBiologyDisease clusterAndrology03 medical and health sciencesFluidosmedicineHumansadolescence; CASA-Morph system; seminal quality; sperm head morphometry; spermiogram; subpopulationeducationCell Shapeurogenital systemlcsh:Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urologymedicine.diseasespermiogramGenéticaSpermSemen Analysis030104 developmental biologyMultivariate AnalysisAdolescenciaSperm Headadolescencesperm head morphometrydescription
Artículo científico This work evaluates sperm head morphometric characteristics in adolescents from 12 to 18 years of age, and the effect of varicocele. Volunteers between 150 and 224 months of age (mean 191, n = 87), who had reached oigarche by 12 years old, were recruited in the area of Barranquilla, Colombia. Morphometric analysis of sperm heads was performed with principal component (PC) and discriminant analysis. Combining seminal fluid and sperm parameters provided five PCs: two related to sperm morphometry, one to sperm motility, and two to seminal fluid components. Discriminant analysis on the morphometric results of varicocele and nonvaricocele groups did not provide a useful classification matrix. Of the semen-related PCs, the most explanatory (40%) was related to sperm motility. Two PCs, including sperm head elongation and size, were sufficient to evaluate sperm morphometric characteristics. Most of the morphometric variables were correlated with age, with an increase in size and decrease in the elongation of the sperm head. For head size, the entire sperm population could be divided into two morphometric subpopulations, SP1 and SP2, which did not change during adolescence. In general, for varicocele individuals, SP1 had larger and more elongated sperm heads than SP2, which had smaller and more elongated heads than in nonvaricocele men. In summary, sperm head morphometry assessed by CASA-Morph and multivariate cluster analysis provides a better comprehension of the ejaculate structure and possibly sperm function. Morphometric analysis provides much more information than data obtained from conventional semen analysis.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-09-01 | Asian Journal of Andrology |