Authors
Ralf R Henkel, Wolf-Bernhard Schill
Publication date
2003/12
Source
Reproductive biology and endocrinology
Volume
1
Pages
1-22
Publisher
BioMed Central
Description
The onset of clinical assisted reproduction, a quarter of a century ago, required the isolation of motile spermatozoa. As the indication of assisted reproduction shifted from mere gynaecological indications to andrological indications during the years, this urged andrological research to understand the physiology of male germ cell better and develop more sophisticated techniques to separate functional spermatozoa from those that are immotile, have poor morphology or are not capable to fertilize oocytes. Initially, starting from simple washing of spermatozoa, separation techniques, based on different principles like migration, filtration or density gradient centrifugation evolved. The most simple and cheapest is the conventional swim-up procedure. A more sophisticated and most gentle migration method is migration-sedimentation. However, its yield is relatively small and the technique is therefore normally only …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RR Henkel, WB Schill - Reproductive biology and endocrinology, 2003