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How fertile is your man?

By Elizabeth Ward

Think “fertility problem” and most people assume there’s something wrong with the female half of the conception equation. In fact, when couples are having trouble making a baby, what’s known as “male factor” is responsible an estimated 40 per cent of the time.


What not to do...


HE SHOULDN'T
Overuse the cellphone Men who talked on cellphones for more than four hours a day produced only 75 per cent as many sperm as those who did not use the devices, a 2006 study found. Also, they had lower-quality sperm, including slower swimmers. Note: the researchers did not ask men about their diet or lifestyle, so the results of this study are not conclusive.

Get chubby In a Danish study of nearly 1 600 men, those who were overweight made significantly less sperm. In addition to having higher sperm counts, men in the normal-weight range – a body mass index (BMI) of 20 to 25 – also had a lower percentage of abnormal sperm.

Expose himself A prospective dad needs to take care with chemicals, especially if he’s a painter, printer, fireman, farm worker or caretaker/cleaner. A review of 10 years of studies linked these occupations to birth defects. He should check if his workplace provides proper protection and ventilation.

Do recreational drugs Smoking marijuana turns sperm into hyperswimmers that “burn out” before they’re able to make their way to the egg. Also, cocaine may actually adhere to sperm without hampering its ability to fertilise an egg, increasing the chances that a child may be affected by the father’s drug use.

Drink too much Heavy drinking is linked with decreased sperm formation and function. While the precise link between moderate drinking and fertility in men is murky, a prospective father should play it safe by limiting alcoholic beverages to two a day, max.

Let them get too hot! Sperm thrive at normal body temperature. Wearing tight briefs hikes the heat in the scrotum, possibly suppressing sperm production (though this isn’t proven). Laptop computers may do the same. A study at the State University of New York at Stony Brook looked at 29 healthy men aged from 21 to 35 and found that balancing computers on their laps for an hour increased scrotal temperature by about 5˚ F.

Another study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology in 2006, found that men’s exposure to heat sources such as saunas in the three months prior to conception was linked to two types of brain tumours in their children.

Finally, a new study conducted at the University of California, San Francisco, linked male infertility to repeated exposure to high water temperatures in baths, hot tubs or Jacuzzis. Fortunately, in nearly half the cases, the ill effects on sperm were reversible; in the other half, smoking was believed to be a contributing factor.


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Estelle

2010-02-24 15:01

Net ter inligting ;-)

Estelle

2010-02-24 14:59

Nog ietsie ;-)







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