1. Carnosine treatment during human semen processing by discontinuous density gradient.
- Author
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Adami LNG, de Lima BT, Andretta RR, Bertolla RP, and Nichi M
- Subjects
- Adult, DNA Fragmentation drug effects, Humans, Male, Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial drug effects, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Semen Analysis, Sperm Motility drug effects, Spermatozoa metabolism, Superoxides metabolism, Young Adult, Carnosine pharmacology, Spermatozoa drug effects
- Abstract
The aim of this article was to evaluate the effects of different concentrations of carnosine added during human semen processing. Semen samples from 34 patients were submitted to processing by discontinuous density gradient centrifugation without (control) or with different concentrations of carnosine supplementation as follows: (a) 20 mM of carnosine supplementation on the layers of Percoll; and (b) 50 mM carnosine supplementation. Sperm samples were then washed with human tubal fluid medium and evaluated according to sperm kinetics and functional assessment. For statistical analysis, data were evaluated by a general linear model or a Friedman test, whenever appropriate. The 50 mM carnosine supplementation led to improved sperm mitochondrial activity when compared to untreated samples. Motility variables, such as percentage of motile and progressively motile spermatozoa, average path velocity, straight line velocity, curvilinear velocity and linearity, showed an improvement after semen processing irrespective of carnosine supplementation. Both concentrations of carnosine increased the beat-cross frequency (BCF) when compared to samples before processing. We conclude that carnosine supplementation in semen samples benefits sperm mitochondrial activity and BCF., (© 2019 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
- Published
- 2020
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