Publications by authors named "Elisabetta Colpi"

Background: Due to the heterogeneous distribution of seminiferous tubules (STs) in patients with nonobstructive azoospermia (NOA), retrieving enough good quality spermatozoa for ICSI may require a complete testicular dissection. According to the only available study in this field, spermatozoa may be found in the testis surface in 34.2% of patients, while a deeper testicular dissection is able to provide spermatozoa for ICSI in 28% of those without spermatozoa in the testis surface.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Patients with non-obstructive azoospermia with a previously failed conventional testicular sperm extraction may undergo a salvage microdissection testicular sperm extraction with the probability of successful sperm retrieval being almost dependent upon the number of previous surgical attempts and to different histopathologic categories.

Objectives: To determine whether the seminiferous tubules pattern and the histological categories could affect the sperm retrieval rate in patients with non-obstructive azoospermia undergoing salvage microdissection testicular sperm extraction after failed conventional testicular sperm extraction.

Materials And Methods: Seventy-nine patients undergoing unilateral or bilateral salvage microdissection testicular sperm extraction were evaluated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients with spermatogenic dysfunction may display sperm parameters ranging from extremely severe oligozoospermia (sperm count lower than 2 million/ml) to azoospermia. It has been proposed that, since these patients may have increased sperm DNA damage that could affect their ICSI outcome, the use of surgically retrieved testicular spermatozoa should be preferred to improve their chance of fathering their biological offspring. However, studies in this field have yielded conflicting results.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The present prediction model was intended to verify whether serum FSH level could be predictive of testis histology in patients with non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA).

Methods: We evaluated two datasets of patients with NOA: the first (San Paolo dataset) comprising 558 patients, 18-63 years old, the second (Procrea dataset) composed by 143 patients, 26-62 years old; bot datasets were combined to obtain a validation set. Multinomial logistic regression was first run with serum FSH and testis volume as independent predictors of testis histology, then, the correctly classified histological subcategories were set as outcome variables of a prediction model in both development and validation sets.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The present study sought to determine the diagnostic accuracy of FSH level, testicular volume, and testicular histology in predicting the successful sperm retrieval (SSR) in a large cohort of patients with non-obstructive azoospermia undergoing conventional testicular sperm extraction (TESE).

Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 356 patients with non-obstructive azoospermia between June 2004 and July 2009. Binary logistic regression was used to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of our predicting model, identifying sperm retrieval rate as binary dependent variable.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To assess the applicability of oocyte IVM in case of nonobstructive azoospermia (NOA).

Design: Case series.

Setting: Private IVF unit.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a population of non-obstructive azoospermia patients, the efficacy of microsurgical testicular sperm extraction (microTESE) and conventional TESE was evaluated in a randomized controlled study on 138 testicles, classified and paired in a 48-square table according to the different classes of the following three variables: patient plasma FSH concentration, orchidometry and testicular histology. Sperm retrieval was positive in 21/22 testicles with hypospermatogenesis (11/11, 10/11; microTESE, TESE respectively), in 12/14 with maturation arrest (6/7, 6/7), in 16/22 with incomplete Sertoli cell-only syndrome (8/11, 8/11), and in 16/80 with complete Sertoli cell-only syndrome (11/40, 5/40). Sperm recovery was positive in 5/24 patients with FSH concentration > or = 3 x maximum value of normal range (N) (4/12, 1/12), in 17/40 patients with 2N < or = FSH < 3N (9/20, 8/20), in 30/48 patients with N < FSH < 2N (17/24, 13/24), and in 13/26 patients with FSH = N (6/13, 7/13).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors evaluated the risk of developing a pelvic abscess in a series of 214 in vitro fertilization cycles that were performed in women with endometriomas. This complication was never recorded, indicating that its risk is very low (0.0; 95% confidence interval, 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Sexual dysfunction in diabetic women has received less attention in clinical research than the sexual symptoms of diabetic men. Although conflicting results have been reported, several studies suggest an increased prevalence of deficient vaginal lubrication in women with diabetes mellitus. As support to the hypothesis of a potential diabetes-related arousal dysfunction caused by a decrease in vaginal lubrication of women with Type 1 diabetes mellitus, we describe the following case report.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is no general agreement on the definition of premature ejaculation, therefore scientific studies often reach discordant results depending on whether they assess the increase in ejaculatory latency or the couple's sexual satisfaction. Etiological theories can be divided into psycho-sexual (anxiety-related, behavioral) and biological (pelvic floor alteration, hypersensitivity of the glans penis, accelerated conduction and cortical amplification of the genital stimuli), both sharing the neurobiological assumption of serotonergic mediation. Premature ejaculation can be iatrogenic (amphetamine, cocaine, dopaminergic drugs) or secondary to urological diseases (prostatovesiculitis, frenulum breve) or to neurological diseases (multiple sclerosis, peripheral neuropathies, medullary expansion processes).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF