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Title: Effect of swim-up sperm washing and subsequent capacitation on acrosome status and functional membrane integrity of normal sperm. Author: Esteves SC, Sharma RK, Thomas AJ, Agarwal A. Journal: Int J Fertil Womens Med; 2000; 45(5):335-41. PubMed ID: 11092705. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Sperm preparation techniques select sperm population with improved sperm motion characteristics. We sought to determine whether the swim-up technique selects spermatozoa with the ability to undergo hypoosmotic swelling, and how swim-up and subsequent capacitation affect the acrosome reaction rate. METHODS: Semen specimens from 15 normal donors were divided into unprocessed, swim-up, and capacitated groups, and sperm motion characteristics, ability to undergo hypoosmotic swelling, and acrosome reaction rate were measured. RESULTS: Sperm motility, viability, and all motion characteristics (except linearity) were significantly increased in both swim-up and capacitated specimens. The ability to respond to hypoosmotic swelling was significantly higher in the spermatozoa isolated by swim-up. The percentage of acrosome-reacted spermatozoa remained unchanged in both unprocessed and swim-up groups, but was significantly higher in the capacitated group. CONCLUSIONS: Swim-up isolates sperm with greater ability to undergo hypoosmotic swelling, but does not change the acrosome reaction rate. In vitro capacitation of spermatozoa selected by swim-up enhances the acrosome reaction rate.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]