The first pregnancy achieved in a seronegative woman following in-vitro fecundation through intracytoplasmic sperm (ICSI) injection from a man with autoimmune deficiency syndrome (AIDS; HIV-1 carrier) is reported. The semen was prepared by PureSperm and swim-up techniques. Some of the motile spermatozoa obtained were used to detect the presence of HIV-1 using the polymerase chain reaction technique. HIV-1 in DNA or RNA form was not detected using this technique. The remaining spermatozoa were frozen. Ovarian stimulation in the woman was performed with long-protocol analogues and gonadotrophins. Thirteen mature oocytes were recovered, into which the thawed spermatozoa were microinjected. Nine embryos were obtained. Four were frozen, four transferred and one discarded. The woman became pregnant. Analyses for HIV-1 in the woman, performed in the first and third months of pregnancy, gave negative results. This case provides further experience with washed semen of sufficient quality for performing artificial insemination in HIV-1-serodiscordant couples (101 inseminations, 31 pregnancies, 28 deliveries, 37 babies, all healthy). In women with obstructed Fallopian tubes, or when the semen is not of sufficient quality for artificial insemination techniques to be performed, ICSI can be carried out using frozen, HIV-1-free semen.
Spinal cord-injured men with ejaculation disorders can have children thanks to assisted reproduction techniques. Spermatozoa from these patients are usually obtained through vibratory stimulation, electroejaculation or by puncturing the seminal duct or the testicle. We present the first published case, as far as we are aware, of spermatozoa obtained through prostatic massage of a paraplegic patient. Penile vibratory stimulation was unsuccessful in this patient. In-vitro fertilization (IVF) with intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) with spermatozoa obtained through electroejaculation was performed at another centre but pregnancy was not achieved. Through prostatic massage, we obtained a total semen volume of 6 ml containing a total count of 12.32x10(6) spermatozoa (6.24x10(6) with tails), 8% of which had motility (graded + and ++); and 16% of which had normal morphology. The spermatozoa obtained were then used to perform IVF with ICSI and a triplet pregnancy was achieved. Prostatic massage appears to be an easy, non-traumatic and risk-free method to obtain spermatozoa from paraplegic patients.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.