Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3940022 | Fertility and Sterility | 2008 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
A similarity was found between the percentage of thawed, DNA-damaged spermatozoa in cancer patients and that in candidates to become sperm bank donors who had low sperm cryofreezability. Both groups were significantly different from the sperm bank donor group. It is suggested that the higher rate of DNA fragmentation in sperm from cancer patients compared with sperm bank donors is apparently a result of selecting donors by the level of sperm cryofreezability (i.e., high), rather than a direct effect of an existing malignancy.
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Authors
Avital Edelstein, Haim Yavetz, Sandra E. Kleiman, Amnon Botchan, Ron Hauser, Gedalia Paz, Leah Yogev,