Meiotic studies have been carried out in a series of 1100 infertile and sterile males. Of these, 599 cases have been studied in testicular biopsy, and 501, in semen samples. This is the largest meiotic series published so far. The incidence of meiotic anomalies was 4.3%. The most frequent chromosome abnormality was desynapsis (3.7%). However, the number of cases with a meiotic arrest, usually due (73.9%) to synaptic anomalies in prophase I, was much higher (18.4%). An attempt is made to correlate the incidence of meiotic anomalies with the results of semen analysis. We discuss the prognosis of desynapsis, based on 41 cases studied, and reevaluate the results obtained in semen samples as compared with our previous results.
In countries where the ROPA technique is legal, it offers lesbian couples a more favourable route, involving both partners, to start a family, and doctors who treat lesbian couples must be sensitive to this new family model.
Endometriosis is a common complex inflammatory condition characterised by the presence of endometrium-like tissue outside the uterus, mainly in the pelvic area. It is associated with chronic pelvic pain and infertility, and its pathogenesis remains poorly understood. The disease is typically classified according to the revised American Fertility Society (rAFS) 4-stage surgical assessment system, although stage does not correlate well with symptomatology or prognosis. Previously identified genetic variants mainly are associated with stage III/IV disease, highlighting the need for further phenotype-stratified analysis that requires larger datasets. We conducted a meta-analysis of 15 genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and a replication analysis, including 58,115 cases and 733,480 controls in total, and sub-phenotype analyses of stage I/II, stage III/IV and infertility-associated endometriosis cases. This revealed 27 genetic loci associated with endometriosis at the genome-wide p-value threshold (P<5×10−8), 13 of which are novel and an additional 8 novel genes identified from gene-based association analyses. Of the 27 loci, 21 (78%) had greater effect sizes in stage III/IV disease compared to stage I/II, 1 (4%) had greater effect size in stage I/II compared to stage III/IV and 17 (63%) had greater effect sizes when restricted to infertility-associated endometriosis cases compared to overall endometriosis. These results suggest that specific variants may confer risk for different sub-types of endometriosis through distinct pathways. Analyses of genetic variants underlying different pain symptoms reported in the UK Biobank showed that 7/9 had positive significant (p<1.28×103) positive genetic correlations with endometriosis, suggesting a genetic basis for sensitivity to pain in general. Additional conditions with significant positive genetic correlations with endometriosis included uterine fibroids, excessive and irregular menstrual bleeding, osteoarthritis, diabetes as well as menstrual cycle length and age at menarche. These results provide a basis for fine-mapping of the causal variants at these 27 loci, and for functional follow-up to understand their contribution to endometriosis and its potential subtypes.
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.
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