Publications by authors named "Baccetti B"

This presentation starts with Galileo's discovery of the microscope and the first Lyncei. Giovanni Heckius and Francesco Stelluti demonstrated different kinds of mosquitoes. Later, in Florence, the Academy of Cimento solved the problem of mosquito reproduction with the discoveries of Francesco Redi, Pietro Paolo da Sangallo, Giuseppe Del Papa and Giovanni Maria Lancisi in the 18th century.

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Objective: To verify clinical outcome after injection of spermatozoa that have undergone the acrosome reaction (reacted spermatozoa) vs. those still having an intact acrosome (nonreacted spermatozoa).

Design: Prospective, randomized study.

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Objective: To investigate the characteristics of birefringence in human sperm heads and apply polarization microscopy for sperm selection at intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).

Design: Prospective randomized study.

Setting: Reproductive Medicine Unit, Società Italiana Studi Medicina della Riproduzione, Bologna, Italy.

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Aim: To perform screening, related to A-kinase anchoring proteins 4 (AKAP4) and tubulin proteins, in spermatozoa with absent or severely reduced motility in order to detect the status of the fibrous sheath and the axonemal structure.

Methods: An immunocytochemical study of tubulin, used as a positive control, and AKAP4 was carried out to detect the presence and the distribution of these proteins in different sperm samples. The morphological characteristics of sperm were studied by transmission electron microscope (TEM) and the results were elaborated using a formula reported in previous studies.

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Background: Patients with poor semen quality show increased sperm disomy and diploidy rates. Oligozoospermia and teratozoospermia are known to influence sperm aneuploidy, but there is still a debate about whether aneuploidies are associated with reduced motility.

Methods: Ejaculates from a large group of patients were examined by light microscopy to evaluate sperm concentration, motility and morphology, and by fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) to analyse the presence of aneuploidies.

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Purpose: Azoospermia may sometimes be related to the use of androgenic anabolic steroids. We report the case of an azoospermic man who had abused androgenic anabolic steroids and who recovered spermatogenesis six months after cessation of abuse and the administration of hormonal therapy.

Methods: An azoospermic 34-year-old man came to Regional Referral Center for Male Infertility.

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A retrospective study to detect specific Y chromosome microdeletions and to evaluate sperm ultrastructural characteristics in infertile men was set up. We selected 219 infertile men referred to Regional Referral Center for Male Infertility, Siena, Italy for semen analysis from January 1999 to April 2004. Family history, lymphocyte karyotype determination, Y microdeletion screening, physical examination, hormonal assays, semen analysis were carried out.

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We present the ultrastructural, functional and chromosomal analyses of sperm from an infertile man with a normal karyotype and 100% necrozoospermia. Tests for microbial infection showed the presence of Escherichia coli in seminal and urethral fluid. Semen analysis was performed concomitantly with the infection and repeated twice after the therapy, in the absence of infection, to control the possible recovery of necrozoospermia.

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Cryptorchidism is a pathological condition defined as the failure of the testis to descend into the scrotum, the location of the cryptorchid testis can be in the inguinal canal or in the prescrotal and abdominal area, sometimes resulting in atrophic seminiferous tubules. The aim of this study was to analyze semen quality of men who underwent orchidopexy for unilateral or bilateral cryptorchidism during childhood. Semen quality was investigated by light microscopy to evaluate sperm concentration and motility.

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Pericentric inversions involving the secondary constriction (qh) region of chromosome 9 are considered to be normal variants of human karyotype. A number of investigators have suggested that chromosomal anomalies can contribute to human infertility causing spermatogenetic derangement. The present study was aimed at verifying the influence of chromosome 9 inversion on human spermatogenesis.

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The sperm 'round head' defect, also known as globozoospermia, is an uncommon alteration of sperm morphology generally characterised by 100% round headed sperm totally lacking an acrosome. This alteration is a genetic sperm defect as demonstrated by analysing the incidence of these alterations in a population of infertile men showing a history of consanguinity and cases belonging to the same family. Ultrastructural characteristics and meiotic segregation in spermatozoa from two patients affected by 'round head' sperm defect were investigated.

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Trypanosoma musculi, a protozoan parasite specific to mouse, was cultured in vitro in the presence of spleen-derived adherent cells. T. musculi co-cultured with adherent cells survived and proliferated indefinitely as long as cellular contact was retained.

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The idea that varicocele plays a detrimental role in fertility is supported by the presence of a higher frequency of affected men among the infertile population than among men with normal semen parameters. In this research we examined ejaculates from a large group of selected men affected by varicocele by light and electron microscopy. The effect of varicocele on chromosome meiotic segregation was investigated by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH).

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Seventeen sperm samples were evaluated by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) before and after swim-up separation. DNA-fragmentation was tested by terminal d-UTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) in unselected and selected semen samples, and the results were analyzed in relation to sperm ultrastructural characteristics detected by TEM. A significant improvement in mean numbers and percentages of structurally normal sperm was observed after swim-up selection, corresponding to a significant decrease in the percentage of necrotic and apoptotic sperm, while the percentage of sperm with immature nuclei did not change significantly.

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Trypanosoma musculi-macrophage co-cultures were studied to investigate the biological role of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced cytokines in controlling the proliferation of parasites in vitro. Macrophages, isolated by peritoneal lavage, sustained the growth and proliferation of the parasites. Macrophages activated with LPS were characterized by up-regulation of nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and phagocytosis of fluorescent latex spheres.

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Inflammation of the male genital tract is a potential cause of male sterility. The quality of spermatozoa from ten patients with recovered uro-genital infections was examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM); fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was performed on sperm nuclei in six our of ten patients to investigate the frequency of aneuploidies. TEM analysis demonstrated the presence of a high percentage of necrosis in all patients, whereas apoptosis was present in only five of them.

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Ultrastructural characteristics and meiotic segregation in spermatozoa from twelve patients affected by uro-genital bacterial infections were investigated. The sperm quality was examined by light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis was performed in eight out of twelve individuals in order to investigate the meiotic behaviour of chromosomes namely gonosomes and chromosome 18. TEM analysis highlighted a severely altered sperm morphology, typical of apoptosis and in particular, necrosis.

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Objective: To evaluate the ultramorphologic sperm features of idiopathic infertile men after acupuncture therapy.

Design: Prospective controlled study.

Setting: Christian-Lauritzen-Institut, Ulm, IVF center Munich, Germany, and Department of General Biology, University of Siena, Siena, Italy.

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Objective: To perform fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and molecular analysis in patients with the genetic sperm defect "dysplasia of the fibrous sheath" (DFS).

Design: Retrospective study.

Setting: Regional Referral Center for Male Infertility, Siena, Italy.

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Background: Asthenozoospermia may sometimes be related to genetic structural defects of the sperm tail detectable by transmission electron microscopy. Dysplasia of the fibrous sheath (DFS) is a genetic sperm defect, characterized by dysplastic development of the axonemal and periaxonemal cytoskeleton. We report the case of an infertile man with normal sperm count and total sperm immotility in which dysplasia of the fibrous sheath, Akap3, Akap4 gene deletions, meiotic segregation of chromosomes 18, X and Y and Y microdeletions were investigated.

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Microscopical advances in assisted reproduction.

J Submicrosc Cytol Pathol

August 2005

In a series of papers carried out by this laboratory it was demonstrated that the quality of sterile males sperm, assessed submicroscopically and mathematically, is closely correlated with the success of the various procedures of assisted reproduction. If we attempt to select hypothetically optimal spermatozoa destined to the ICSI by light inverted microscopy, a considerable amount of ultrastructural information is lost and our selection is merely based on the motility. In this study we apply polarization microscopy to the ICSI technique, introducing polarizing and analyzing lenses in an inverted microscope model, operating in a transparent container.

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Background: In order to clarify the relationship between chromosomal rearrangements, sperm morphology and interchromosomal effects (ICE), we studied the spermatogenetic defects in seven infertile Robertsonian translocation carriers.

Methods: Lymphocyte karyotypes were evaluated using Giemsa-Trypsin-Giemsa banding and fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH). Semen analysis was performed by light and transmission electron microscopy.

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Cholinergic neurotransmitter system molecules were found to play a role during fertilisation and early cell cycles of a large number of invertebrate and vertebrate organisms. In this study, we investigated the presence and possible function of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT, the biosynthetic enzyme of acetylcholine) in gametes of the sea urchin, Paracentrotus lividus, through localisation and functional studies. ChAT-like molecules were detected in oocytes, mature eggs and zygotes with indirect immunofluorescence methods.

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Objective: To characterize and describe the ontogenesis of a rare flagellar defect affecting the whole sperm population of a sterile man.

Design: Case report.

Setting: Regional referral center for male infertility in Siena, Italy.

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Aim: To evaluate the possible links between ultrastructural sperm quality and the clinical pregnancy rate in infertile males treated with FSH before intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).

Methods: Forty-four infertile males with idiopathic oligo-asthenozoospermia were randomly allocated to the treated (n=24) and non-treated (control, n=20) groups. Semen analysis was carried out by light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) before and 12 weeks after FSH therapy.

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