Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men

This study was designed to characterize morphometric sperm subpopulations in normozoospermic men by using different statistical methods and examining their suitability to classify correctly different sperm nuclear morphologies present in human ejaculates. Ejaculates from 21 normozoospermic men were...

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Main Authors: Jesús L Yániz, Sandra Vicente-Fiel, Carles Soler, Pilar Recreo, Teresa Carretero, Araceli Bono, José M Berné, Pilar Santolaria
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2016-01-01
Series:Asian Journal of Andrology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2016;volume=18;issue=6;spage=819;epage=823;aulast=Yániz
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spelling doaj-f9b28f99e69f46cdbf6243d6ea85d4c12020-11-24T21:05:29ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsAsian Journal of Andrology1008-682X1745-72622016-01-0118681982310.4103/1008-682X.186872Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in menJesús L YánizSandra Vicente-FielCarles SolerPilar RecreoTeresa CarreteroAraceli BonoJosé M BernéPilar SantolariaThis study was designed to characterize morphometric sperm subpopulations in normozoospermic men by using different statistical methods and examining their suitability to classify correctly different sperm nuclear morphologies present in human ejaculates. Ejaculates from 21 normozoospermic men were collected for the study. After semen collection and analysis, samples were prepared for morphometric determination. At least 200 spermatozoa per sample were assessed for sperm morphometry by computer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis (CASA-Morph) using fluorescence. Clustering and discriminant procedures were performed to identify sperm subpopulations from the morphometric data obtained. Clustering procedures resulted in the classification of spermatozoa into three morphometric subpopulations (large-round 30.4%, small-round 46.6%, and large-elongated 22.9%). In the second analysis, using discriminant methods, the classification was made independently of size and shape. Three morphological categories according to nuclear size (small <10.90 μm2, intermediate 10.91-13.07 μm2, and large >13.07 μm2) and four categories were defined on 400 canonical cells (100 × 4) from 10 men according to sperm nuclear shape (oval, pyriform, round, and elongated). Thereafter, the resulting classification functions were used to categorize 4200 spermatozoa from 21 men. Differences in the class distribution were observed among men from both clustering and discriminant procedures. It was concluded that the combination of CASA-Morph fluorescence-based technology with multivariate cluster or discriminant analyses provides new information on the description of different morphometric sperm subpopulations in normal individuals, and that important variations in the distribution of morphometric sperm subpopulations may exist between men, with possible functional implications.http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2016;volume=18;issue=6;spage=819;epage=823;aulast=Yánizcomputer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis; man; sperm subpopulations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jesús L Yániz
Sandra Vicente-Fiel
Carles Soler
Pilar Recreo
Teresa Carretero
Araceli Bono
José M Berné
Pilar Santolaria
spellingShingle Jesús L Yániz
Sandra Vicente-Fiel
Carles Soler
Pilar Recreo
Teresa Carretero
Araceli Bono
José M Berné
Pilar Santolaria
Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
Asian Journal of Andrology
computer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis; man; sperm subpopulations
author_facet Jesús L Yániz
Sandra Vicente-Fiel
Carles Soler
Pilar Recreo
Teresa Carretero
Araceli Bono
José M Berné
Pilar Santolaria
author_sort Jesús L Yániz
title Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
title_short Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
title_full Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
title_fullStr Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
title_sort comparison of different statistical approaches to evaluate morphometric sperm subpopulations in men
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Asian Journal of Andrology
issn 1008-682X
1745-7262
publishDate 2016-01-01
description This study was designed to characterize morphometric sperm subpopulations in normozoospermic men by using different statistical methods and examining their suitability to classify correctly different sperm nuclear morphologies present in human ejaculates. Ejaculates from 21 normozoospermic men were collected for the study. After semen collection and analysis, samples were prepared for morphometric determination. At least 200 spermatozoa per sample were assessed for sperm morphometry by computer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis (CASA-Morph) using fluorescence. Clustering and discriminant procedures were performed to identify sperm subpopulations from the morphometric data obtained. Clustering procedures resulted in the classification of spermatozoa into three morphometric subpopulations (large-round 30.4%, small-round 46.6%, and large-elongated 22.9%). In the second analysis, using discriminant methods, the classification was made independently of size and shape. Three morphological categories according to nuclear size (small <10.90 μm2, intermediate 10.91-13.07 μm2, and large >13.07 μm2) and four categories were defined on 400 canonical cells (100 × 4) from 10 men according to sperm nuclear shape (oval, pyriform, round, and elongated). Thereafter, the resulting classification functions were used to categorize 4200 spermatozoa from 21 men. Differences in the class distribution were observed among men from both clustering and discriminant procedures. It was concluded that the combination of CASA-Morph fluorescence-based technology with multivariate cluster or discriminant analyses provides new information on the description of different morphometric sperm subpopulations in normal individuals, and that important variations in the distribution of morphometric sperm subpopulations may exist between men, with possible functional implications.
topic computer-assisted sperm morphometry analysis; man; sperm subpopulations
url http://www.ajandrology.com/article.asp?issn=1008-682X;year=2016;volume=18;issue=6;spage=819;epage=823;aulast=Yániz
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