1986
DOI: 10.1530/jrf.0.0780093
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Relationship between human sperm motility characteristics and sperm penetration into human cervical mucus in vitro

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Cited by 136 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…Sperm morphology assessment is one example of classification as normal or abnormal based on set criteria for characteristics measured on continuous scales (e.g., head size and shape, acrosome size, proportion of the head occupied by vacuoles, midpiece size and contour, tail length, and size of the cytoplasmic residue). It is therefore reasonable to use data obtained by objective measurements to establish a cutoff point between the categories of slow and rapid progressive spermatozoa; 25 µm s -1 [14] is based on results derived from analysis of sperm kinematics [7,11]. It is less important whether the limit is 23 or 25 µm s -1 than that the presence of rapidly forward moving spermatozoa is assessed separately from spermatozoa with less progressive motility.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Sperm morphology assessment is one example of classification as normal or abnormal based on set criteria for characteristics measured on continuous scales (e.g., head size and shape, acrosome size, proportion of the head occupied by vacuoles, midpiece size and contour, tail length, and size of the cytoplasmic residue). It is therefore reasonable to use data obtained by objective measurements to establish a cutoff point between the categories of slow and rapid progressive spermatozoa; 25 µm s -1 [14] is based on results derived from analysis of sperm kinematics [7,11]. It is less important whether the limit is 23 or 25 µm s -1 than that the presence of rapidly forward moving spermatozoa is assessed separately from spermatozoa with less progressive motility.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With in vitro techniques, fertilization and zygote/embryo cleavage rates are obvious measures. With in vivo fertilization, sperm-cervical mucus penetration tests and rapid progressive sperm motility have long been known to be useful indicators [6][7][8][9]. Irrespective of whether one adopts an in vitro or in vivo perspective, progressive sperm motility is thus required for success (with the exception of treatment by intracytoplasmic sperm injection [ICSI]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was shown in that study that the presence of SP in the thawing medium reduced the proportion of spermatozoa with B pattern by CTC (indicating increased plasma membrane stabilization), and also increased the proportion of spermatozoa able to penetrate cervical mucus in vitro. Cervical mucus penetration has been related to sperm motility, and specifically to spermatozoa with good linear progression and moderate amplitudes of lateral head displacement (Aitken et al 1985, Feneux et al 1985, Mortimer et al 1986). Therefore, it seems logical that observed differences in mucus-penetrating ability would be reflected in differences in sperm kinematics, as well as in differences in head plasma membrane stability.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only seminal spermatozoa with good, progressive motility and a high amplitude of lateral head displacement are able to penetrate oestrous cervical mucus (Aitken et al 1985, Feneux et al 1985, Mortimer et al 1986. It is known that spermatozoa incubated under capacitating conditions, in the absence of SP, exhibit different movement patterns (kinematics) from seminal spermatozoa (which are the ones that penetrate cervical mucus in vivo) (reviewed by Mortimer, 1997).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Asthenospermia, also known as poor sperm motility, is one of the important factors for male infertility (Aitken et al, 1982a). Sperm cannot travel through a mucus-filled cervix to reach the site of fertilization if the sperm has low motility (Mortimer et al, 1986;Folgerø et al, 1993).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%