Fertility and Sterility
Volume 70, Issue 5 , Pages 883-891, November 1998

Human sperm head morphometric distribution and its influence on human fertility

  • Nabil Aziz (M.R.C.O.G.)

      Affiliations

    • University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
    • Academic Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Liverpool.
    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Nabil Aziz, M.R.C.O.G., Liverpool Women’s Hospital, Crown Street, Liverpool L8 7SS, United Kingdom
  • ,
  • Simon Fear, B.Sc.

      Affiliations

    • University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
    • Department of Mathematical Sciences, Division of Statistics and Operational Research. University of Liverpool.
  • ,
  • Clare Taylor, Ph.D.

      Affiliations

    • Liverpool Women’s Hospital, Liverpool, United Kingdom
    • Reproductive Medicine Unit, Liverpool Women’s Hospital.
  • ,
  • Charles R Kingsland, M.D.

      Affiliations

    • Liverpool Women’s Hospital, Liverpool, United Kingdom
    • Reproductive Medicine Unit, Liverpool Women’s Hospital.
  • ,
  • D.Iwan Lewis-Jones, M.D.

      Affiliations

    • University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
    • Academic Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Liverpool.

Received 7 January 1998; received in revised form 20 July 1998; accepted 20 July 1998.

Abstract 

Objective: To study the distribution of live sperm head size in semen and sperm preparations as a predictor of fertility.

Design: Prospective blind clinical trial.

Setting: Academic tertiary referral center.

Patient(s): One hundred fifty-five patients undergoing IVF treatment. Females with conditions negatively influencing fertilization were excluded.

Intervention(s): Morphometric analysis (head area, major axis, minor axis, and elongation ratio) of video images of sperm in semen and swim-up preparations used for IVF treatment was performed with a Hamilton-Thorne analyzer V 8.1 (Hamilton-Thorn Research, Beverly, MA).

Main Outcome Measure(s): Oocyte fertilization.

Result(s): Seventy-four percent of patients achieved fertilization. Fertilizers and nonfertilizers had different sperm head area distribution. The fertilizers had a significantly smaller interquartile range of sperm head area and of major axis in both semen and sperm preparation compared with the nonfertilizers. A subgroup of men who had fathered a child naturally had a more uniform sperm head area in semen with a significantly smaller median compared with those who failed to father a child naturally with their healthy female partner. We used multiple logistic regression applying forward stepwise selection of variables in building three predictive models of probability of fertilization.

Conclusion(s): Successful IVF or history of fathering a child was associated with a more uniform sperm head area in semen and sperm preparation.

Keywords:  Sperm, live morphometry, sperm deformity index, in vitro fertilization, human

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 Supported in part by grant RDS 1720, Research Development Fund, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.

PII: S0015-0282(98)00317-3

Fertility and Sterility
Volume 70, Issue 5 , Pages 883-891, November 1998