Data from men in greater Seattle area reveals no downward trend in semen quality: further evidence that deterioration of semen quality is not geographically uniform**Supported in part by grant P-50 HD12629 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and by grant CSA-88-024 from the Contraceptive Research and Development Program (CONRAD), at Eastern Virginia Medical School, Arlington, Virginia, under a cooperative agreement with the United States Agency for International Development (CCP-3044-A-00-2015-00), Washington, D.C. (C.A.P.); and by grant RR-00425 Clinical Research Center from the National Institutes of Health (C.W. and N.G.B.).††The views expressed by the authors do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID and CONRAD.
1996 ◽
Vol 65
(5)
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pp. 1015-1020
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1992 ◽
Vol 57
(5)
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pp. 1126-1128
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1993 ◽
Vol 60
(3)
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pp. 533-539
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1993 ◽
Vol 59
(5)
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pp. 1118-1123
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1990 ◽
Vol 53
(1)
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pp. 143-149
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1991 ◽
Vol 55
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pp. 647-649
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1990 ◽
Vol 54
(1)
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pp. 113-120
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1990 ◽
Vol 53
(4)
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pp. 602-603
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1991 ◽
Vol 55
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pp. 165-169
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1991 ◽
Vol 56
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pp. 1156-1161
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1992 ◽
Vol 57
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pp. 209-214
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