Abstract

Cryopreservation of semen is a useful tool for male fertility preservation. Some evidence for a beneficial effect of L-carnitine supplementation of freezing media on cryopreserved semen samples has been reported. Here, we examined the association of endogenous levels of seminal L-carnitine with post-thaw semen parameters. We also investigated the effect of freezing medium supplemented with L-carnitine on sperm characteristics, related to endogenous seminal L-carnitine levels. Semen analyses were performed on 125 fresh samples, and after standard cryopreservation and with L-carnitine as a supplement. Participants were categorized into two groups based on the median levels of endogenous seminal L-carnitine: low L-carnitine (≤38.8 µg/ml) and high L-carnitine (>38.8 µg/ml). After standard cryopreservation, semen samples with high L-carnitine levels showed higher rapid progressive, progressive and total sperm motility and a reduced seminal static oxidation–reduction potential (ORP) level than samples with low L-carnitine levels. Only in post-thaw samples with low L-carnitine levels, there was an increase in the amount of sperm neck midpiece defects, compared to the fresh samples. Cryopreservation with L-carnitine had the most beneficial effect on rapid progressive sperm motility in samples with high endogenous L-carnitine levels. In conclusion, L-carnitine has a beneficial impact on sperm characteristics in post-thaw samples both as an endogenous component in seminal plasma and as a supplement in the freezing medium, by improving sperm motility and reducing seminal oxidative stress.

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