Clinical Use and Misuse of Automated Semen Analysis
- 17 December 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 637 (1) , 424-435
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1991.tb27327.x
Abstract
During the past six years, there has been an explosion of technology which allows automated machine-vision for sperm analysis. CASA clearly provides an opportunity for objective, systematic assessment of sperm motion. But there are many caveats in using this type of equipment. CASA requires a disciplined and standardized approach to semen collection, specimen preparation, machine settings, calibration and avoidance of sampling bias. Potential sources of error can be minimized. Unfortunately, the rapid commercialization of this technology preceded detailed statistical analysis of such data to allow equally rapid comparisons of data between different CASA machines and among different laboratories. Thus, it is now imperative that we standardize use of this technology and obtain more detailed biological insights into sperm motion parameters in semen and after capacitation before we empirically employ CASA for studies of fertility prediction. In the basic science arena, CASA technology will likely evolve to provide new algorithms for accurate sperm motion analysis and give us an opportunity to address the biophysics of sperm movement. In the clinical arena, CASA instruments provide the opportunity to share and compare sperm motion data among laboratories by virtue of its objectivity, assuming standardized conditions of utilization. Identification of men with specific sperm motion disorders is certain, but the biological relevance of motility dysfunction to actual fertilization remains uncertain and surely the subject for further study.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Measurement Conditions on Quantification of Hyperactivated Human Sperm Subpopulations by Digital Image Analysis1Biology of Reproduction, 1989
- Assessment of sperm motion characteristics from fertile and infertile men using a fully automated computer-assisted semen analyzerFertility and Sterility, 1989
- Evaluation of the CellSoft automated semen analysis system in a routine laboratory settingFertility and Sterility, 1988
- Influence of image sampling frequency on the perceived movement characteristics of progressively motile human spermatozoaGamete Research, 1988
- Computer-Assisted Human Semen Analysis Sampling Errors and ReproducibilityJournal of Andrology, 1988
- Quantitation of Specific Parameters of Motility in Large Numbers of Human Sperm by Digital Image Processing1Biology of Reproduction, 1988
- Computerized semen analysis: objective measurement of semen characteristics is biased by subjective parameter settingFertility and Sterility, 1987
- Automatic Analysis of Human Sperm MotionJournal of Andrology, 1987
- Sperm Motility Assessment by VideomicrographyFertility and Sterility, 1981