Dr. Paul J Turek (born July 8, 1960, Manchester, Connecticut) is an American physician and surgeon, men's reproductive health specialist, and businessman.[1] Turek is a recent recipient of a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant for research designed to help infertile men become fathers using stem cells.[2][3][4][5]

Paul Turek
Paul Turek in 2009
Born (1960-07-08) July 8, 1960 (age 63)
Alma materYale College, New Haven, CT
Occupation(s)Physician, TV Personality and Medical Expert on Men's Reproductive Health
Known forFNA Mapping, Men's Fertility Research, and Male Reproductive Health
Scientific career
InstitutionsMen's Reproductive Health Clinical Research Center
The Turek Clinic
Websitehttp://www.theturekclinic.com

Early life edit

Turek was born in Manchester, Connecticut, to immigrant parents. His mother was the administrative secretary in the Manchester public school system, while his father was a sheet metal mechanic and welder. He attended Manchester High School and graduated salutatorian in 1978.[citation needed]

Education and Training edit

At Yale College he graduated summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, received the Henry J. Belknap Prize in the Biological Sciences, and co-authored several scientific publications from work in the laboratory of Dr. Robert Handschumacher in the Department of Pharmacology at the Yale School of Medicine. While at Stanford Medical School, he participated in immunology research and developed an interest in the surgical discipline of urology. He pursued his internship and residency training in urology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. During this time, he developed an interest in urologic microsurgery and reproductive medicine and soon after pursued fellowship training in microsurgery and male reproductive medicine under the guidance of Dr. Larry Lipshultz at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. After completing his fellowship, he was recruited to the faculty of the University of California San Francisco (UCSF).

Medical background edit

Turek is a board-certified urologist and microsurgeon, specializing in male fertility. He has performed and published research in men's reproductive health issues including genetic infertility, ejaculatory duct obstruction, immunologic infertility, quality of life issues with infertility, testis cancer and stem cell science, and has developed several techniques for evaluating and treating male infertility. While at UCSF, he was Director of the Male Reproductive Clinical Laboratory, Program Leader of PROGENI (The Program in the Genetics of Infertility), Director of the UCSF Men's Reproductive Health Clinic and Research Program, and the director of a National Institutes of Health grant to train new faculty in men's reproductive health. He has authored more than 175 publications on clinical and scientific issues in reproductive health. Through his published work, he is a proponent of the theory that male infertility is an early marker for other diseases that occur later in life. He became a full professor, with an endowed chair in teaching funded by the Academy at UCSF, a chair he later abandoned in favor of starting his own private clinic.[6]

He is now Director of The Turek Clinics, medical centers in California that specialize exclusively in men's reproductive health care. He was President in 2011 of the American Society of Andrology and the Society of Male Reproduction and Urology in 2013.

Research and inventions edit

Turek has designed and led in numerous key research programs, as well as inventing several procedures, that have had significant impact on the science of men's reproductive health. Turek is an advocate for men's general health, and speaks about on the topic on television and at companies such as Google.[7][8] He is on the medical advisory board for Fertile Hope, a LIVESTRONG Foundation initiative.[9]

FNA Mapping edit

Turek is the inventor of Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) Mapping, also known less formally as sperm mapping, testicular cartography, or "GPS for the testis." FNA Mapping is a non-invasive office procedure that can be performed in a standardized, template fashion to identify men who qualify for, and assist in the planning of, sperm retrieval for IVF-ICSI.[10] This technique has been important because it has improved identification of men who are likely to have a successful sperm retrieval while at the same time avoiding costly and unnecessary assisted reproductive techniques. FNA Mapping has become a fundamental procedure in the profession and has been adopted at most reproductive centers around the world.[11]

The success of assisted reproductive techniques such as intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) encouraged reproductive clinicians to look beyond the ejaculate and into the male reproductive tract to find sperm. In men with no sperm count (azoospermia), it soon became clear that sperm could be found in the testes and used with ICSI, but sperm production was characteristically "patchy" or "focal" in azoospermic testes. FNA Mapping was designed to diagnose the degree of "patchiness" of sperm production in azoospermic men and determine, among other things, whether a sperm retrieval would succeed in a specific patient.[12] Prior to FNA Mapping, testis biopsy was the major procedure for determining the quality of sperm presence. Testis biopsy is a more invasive procedure than FNA Mapping, and studies have shown that FNA Mapping provides better and more complete information about sperm presence.[13]

In addition, FNA Mapping has been used to determine the effectiveness of mapping in patients after sterilizing chemotherapy,[14] the ability to find and diagnose small testis tumors,[15] and the ability of mapping to precisely define subsets of infertile men for more accurate phenotyping for molecular biology and genetic studies.,[16][17]

Ejaculatory duct obstruction and ejaculatory duct mamometry edit

In a series of papers, Turek and his team made a significant advancement in the diagnosis of ejaculatory duct obstruction (EDO) as a cause of male infertility by studying and investigating the approach and limitations of current treatments for this condition.,[18][19] This led to a prospective, comparative study of currently used techniques to diagnosis EDO[20] followed by the invention and publication of a dynamic, physiologically relevant test, termed ejaculatory duct manometry, to definitively diagnose this surgical condition.[21]

Evolving the hypoosmotic swelling test edit

The Hypoosmotic Swelling Test is a laboratory test to measure the functional integrity of the human sperm membrane. In this test, the sperm is exposed to a hypososmotic solution consisting of a 50:50 mixture of 150 mosmol fructose and 150 mosmol sodium citrate. The tails of normal sperm will swell when exposed to this solution, whereas damaged sperm with low motility will not swell measurably.

Although a moving or motile sperm was traditionally required for use with this technique, some infertile men have genetically immotile sperm and are unable to take advantage of this technology to become fathers.[22] In early research in this area, Turek tried to understand more about how sperm "viability" relates to "motility."[23] Subsequently, his team evolved the Hypoosmotic Swelling Test into a therapeutic tool that harmlessly and physiologically "pokes" a non-moving sperm to determine whether it is alive and therefore able to be used for ICSI.[24] This technique was subsequently applied to men with genetically immotile sperm with success[25] and this technique is now used routinely in many reproductive centers worldwide.

New approach to genetic testing for male infertility edit

Concerned about the risk of transmitting genetic male infertility or other genetic issues to offspring with the use of modern assisted reproductive techniques such as ICSI, Turek founded a unique, trademarked program called PROGENI (Program in the Genetics of Infertility) at the University of California San Francisco. PROGENI's methodology is based on the classic genetic counseling philosophy that advocates non-prescriptive testing for genetic disease (an approach which is based on informing the patient of risks and then letting the patient decide whether he will undergo testing to delineate risk). Turek has published over a dozen papers on improved patient outcomes and decision making from over 800 patients that have entered the program since inception.,[26][27]

Using testis stem cells to create embryonic stem cells edit

The debate about the use of embryonic stem cells for research has been loud, acrimonious, and highly politicized with the result that embryonic stem cells were effectively banned for research uses in the United States. To solve the problem of limited embryonic stem cell availability, Turek and his colleagues invented a process by which the early germline stem cells from the normal adult testis, called spermatogonia, can be coaxed into becoming true, embryonic-like stem cells when placed in an appropriate culture environment.[28] This finding has been independently confirmed by other research groups in the world and opens up the possibility of making embryonic stem cells for regenerative, cell-based therapy for men in the future without the need for embryos and all of the political and ethical issues that the use of human embryos engender.

Identifying lifestyle issues which affect male infertility edit

Throughout his career, Turek has been interested in defining common exposures that may lead to male infertility. He has published studies on the effects of hot baths[29] and anabolic steroids[30] on male infertility and opined about the boxer-brief controversy[31] and the ability of the standard male infertility evaluation to detect toxic insults.[32] He has examined the toxic effect of medications such as the antioxidant selenium[33] and the anti-inflammatory drug class called biological response modifiers on male fertility.[34] He has also tried to better delineate the reproductive and general health risks posed by a common birth defect in boys, the undescended testicle.,[35][36][37]

Academic honors and awards edit

Turek has receive numerous honors throughout his career, including the Henry Weyrauch Award from the Western Urologic Forum and James L Goebel Grand Prize from the American Urological Association. Other organizations that have recognized his work include the Philadedelphia Urological Society, the American College of Surgeons, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, and the Academy of Medical Educators.

References edit

  1. ^ Christian, Spencer (2005-10-31). "Myth Busting on Male Fertility". Retrieved 11 February 2009.
  2. ^ "Artificial Testicle Could Make Sperm for Infertile Men". 2012-01-27. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  3. ^ Lorie A., Parch (2012-01-27). "Artificial testicle could help infertile men". Archived from the original on 12 February 2012. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  4. ^ "Doctors in the News". 2012-04-07. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  5. ^ Nancy, Lamontagne (2012-04-04). "Small business explores new approaches in reproductive toxicology". Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  6. ^ http://www.cpmc.org/providersearch/?sitecfg=49&vs=detail&action=providerdetail&masterid=19709&isLevelOne=1&recId=ps99848sp9984838171778&healthplans=0&physname=Paul J. Turek, M.D.|
  7. ^ "@Google Talks: Dr. Paul Turek - "A Guy's Guide to Maintaining Sexual Health"". 2011-07-11. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  8. ^ "The Turek Clinic YouTube Channel". Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  9. ^ "Fertile Hope Medical Advisory Board". Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  10. ^ Turek PJ, Givens C, Schriock ED, Meng M, Pederson RA and Conaghan J. Testis sperm extraction and intracytoplasmic sperm injection guided by prior fine needle aspiration mapping in nonobstructive azoospermia. Fertility and Sterility. 71: 552-8, 1999|
  11. ^ Shefi S, Kaplan K and Turek PJ. Analysis of spermatogenesis in nonobstructive azoospermic and virtually azoospermic men with known testicular pathology. Reprod Biol Med Online. 18: 460-64, 2009.|
  12. ^ Turek P.J, I. Cha, Ljung, B-M., and Conaghan J. Diagnostic Findings From Testis Fine Needle Aspiration Mapping in Obstructed and Non-Obstructed Azoospermic Men. Journal of Urology, 163: 1709-1716, 2000.|
  13. ^ Turek PJ, I Cha, and Ljung, B-M. Systematic Fine Needle Aspiration of the Testis: Correlation to Biopsy and the Results of Organ "Mapping" for Mature Sperm in Azoospermic Men. Urology. 49: 743-748, 1997.|
  14. ^ Damani MN, Master V, Meng MV, Turek PJ, Oates RM. Post-chemotherapy ejaculatory azoospermia: Fatherhood with sperm from testis tissue using intracytoplasmic sperm injection. J Clin Oncology 20: 930-936, 2002.|
  15. ^ Freedland SJ, Cha I, Turek PJ. Non-Palpable Leydig Cell Tumors Diagnosed by Fine Needle Aspiration. Journal of Urology, 158: 543-544, 1997|
  16. ^ Black LD, Nudell DM, Cha I, Cherry AM and PJ Turek. Compound Genetic Defects as a Cause of Male Infertility. Human Reproduction. 15: 449-51, 2000. |
  17. ^ Nudell DM, Castillo M, Turek PJ, and Reijo Pera, R. Increased frequency of mutations in DNA in infertile men with meiotic arrest. Human Reproduction. 15: 1289-1294, 2000.|
  18. ^ Turek PJ, Magana JO, Lipshultz LI. Semen Parameters Before and After Transurethral Surgery for Ejaculatory Duct Obstruction. Journal of Urology, 155: 1291-3, 1996|
  19. ^ Kadioglu A, Cayan S, Tefekli A, Orhan I, Engin G, Tellaloglu S and Turek PJ. Does response to treatment of ejaculatory duct obstruction in infertile men vary with pathology? Fertility and Sterility. 76:138-42, 2001 |
  20. ^ Purohit R, Wu D, Shinohara K, and Turek PJ. A comparison of three diagnostic methods in the evaluation of ejaculatory duct obstruction. J. Urol. 171: 232-36, 2004 |
  21. ^ Eisenberg M, Walsh TJ, Garcia M, Shinohara K and Turek PJ. Ejaculatory Duct Manometry in Normal Men and in Patients with Ejaculatory Duct Obstruction. J. Urol. 180: 255-60, 2008. Published online 20 May 2008 |
  22. ^ Turek PJ and Smikle CB. Viability of Non-Motile Sperm. Assisted Reproduction Reviews. 7: 34-38, 1997 |
  23. ^ Bachtell N, and Conaghan J. and Turek PJ. The Relative Viability of Human Spermatozoa from the Testis, Epididymis and Vas Deferens Before and After Cryopreservation. Human Reproduction. 14: 101-104, 1999 |
  24. ^ Smikle CB and Turek PJ. Hypoosmotic Swelling Can Accurately Determine the Viability of Nonmotile Sperm. Molecular Reproduction and Development. 47: 200-203, 1997 |
  25. ^ Cayan S., Schriock E, Conaghan J, and Turek PJ. Birth after intracytoplasmic sperm injection using testicular sperm from men with Kartagener/immotile cilia syndrome. Fertil Steril. 76: 1-3, 2001 |
  26. ^ Black LD, Nudell DM, Cha I, Cherry AM and PJ Turek. Compound Genetic Defects as a Cause of Male Infertility. Human Reproduction. 15: 449-51, 2000 |
  27. ^ Cayan S, Erdemir F, Ozbey I, Turek PJ, Kadioglu A, Tellaloglu S. Can varicocelectomy significantly change the way couples use assisted reproductive technologies? Journal of Urology 167:1749-56, 2002 |
  28. ^ Kossak N, Meneses J, Shefi S, Nyugen HN Chavez S, Nicholas C, Gromoll J, Turek PJ and Reijo Pera R. Isolation and characterization of human spermatogonial stem cell-derived pluripotent cells. Stem Cells. 27(1):138-149, 2009. Epub 18 Oct 2008 |
  29. ^ Shefi S, Tarapore PE, Walsh TJ, Croughan C, Turek PJ. The reversibility of hyperthermia on semen quality in infertile men. Int Braz J Urol. 33:50-6; discussion 56-7, 2007 |
  30. ^ Turek PJ, Williams RW, Gilbaugh JH, Lipshultz LI. The Reversibility of Anabolic-Induced Azoospermia. Journal of Urology, 153 (5): 1628-1630, 1995 |
  31. ^ Turek P.J. Boxers and Biopsies: Separating Fashion From Fact in Male Infertility. Journal of Urology. 160: 1337, 1998 |
  32. ^ Turek PJ. Does the Male Infertility Clinical Evaluation Adequately Assess Toxiciological Exposures? Fertil Steril. 2008, 89(2 Suppl):e69 |
  33. ^ Hawkes WC and Turek PJ. The effects of dietary selenium on sperm motility in healthy men. J. Androl. 22: 764-771, 2001 |
  34. ^ Mahadevan U, Terdiman J, Aron J, Jacobsen S and Turek PJ. Infliximab and semen quality in men with Inflammatory bowel disease. Inflam Bowel Dis. Apr;11(4):395-99, 2005 |
  35. ^ Walsh TJ, Dall’era MA, Croughan M, Carroll PR, Turek PJ. Cryptorchidism: prepubertal orchidopexy may prevent testis cancer J Urol. 178:1440-6; discussion 1446, 2007 |
  36. ^ Walsh TJ, Davies BJ, Croughan MS, Carroll PR, and Turek PJ. Racial disparities among boys with testicular germ cell tumors in the United States. J Urol. 2008, 179(5):1961-5. Epub 2008 Mar 20 |
  37. ^ Shefi S, Kaplan K and Turek PJ. Analysis of spermatogenesis in nonobstructive azoospermic and virtually azoospermic men with known testicular pathology. Reprod Biol Med Online. 18: 460-64, 2009 |