Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Male infertility ´is increasing

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Male infertility ´is increasing´http://www.alien-earth.org/news/item.php?keyid=257 & page=1 & category=13BBC June 26, 2005

Infertility may be becoming more of a man´s than a woman´s problem, new figures suggest. Until now, both were level pegging - 40% of cases linked to men, 40% to women and 20% to joint problems. However, the European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology found rates of an IVF treatment typically used to help male infertility have risen. It said a number of factors including declining sperm quality due to environmental toxins may be involved. A male problem Use of ICSI (intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection), in which a single sperm is injected into the egg to fertilise it, made up only 43% of IVF cycles in 1997, but accounted for 52% of cycles in 2002. There were more than 122,000 ICSI cycles and nearly 113,000 IVF cycles in 2002, the ESHRE committee announced at its annual meeting in Copenhagen on Wednesday. The data came from 24 European countries. Dr Anders Nyboe Anderson, coordinator of the committee, said: "We do not really know why ICSI has become more prevalent. There are probably many reasons." It could be that the causes of infertility are shifting. He added: "We see less and less infertility caused by severe tubal [fertility tube] problems in women, probably because of better sexual protection due to the risk of Aids during the last 15 years." However he said the data on male subfertility showed it appeared to be increasing. Age-related problems Dr Anderson said: "Maybe environmental factors are playing an increasing role as the planet becomes more polluted and factors that disrupt the endocrine system are in the food chain." But he said it was more likely that ICSI was becoming the preferred method of assisted reproduction, as the technique has improved since its introduction in the early 1990s. He said private clinics tended to use ICSI rather than IVF to improve the chance of success first time, even though both techniques have the same take-home-baby rate. Another theory is that men, like women, are increasingly putting off starting a family until they are older, when fertility is lower, Dr Anderson said. More and more men aged 50-65 are now attending fertility clinics - men over 40 making up nearly a quarter of consultations, the study said. Impact In separate research, a team of Canadian scientists have found damage to DNA in sperm increases with age. By analysing the sperm of 2,134 men they found a wide variation in quality that was linked with age. DNA damage was far higher in men over 45 than in younger men - men aged 45 had double the damage of those younger than 30. He said data from the US showed that the birth rate for fathers older than 35 had increased by nearly 20% between 1980 and 1995. Lead author Dr Sergey Moskotsev, of the Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, told the ESHRE conference: "The effect of age on male infertility is particularly interesting because of the growth in the number of men choosing to father children at older ages. "The combination of increased female factor infertility, increased sperm DNA damage, low levels of DNA repair and increased abnormalities in conventional semen parameters will have a pronounced impact on their reproductive potential." Dr Allan Pacey, Senior Lecturer in Andrology at the University of Sheffield and Secretary of the British Fertility Society, said: "This should remind us that the male reproductive system is not immune from the effects of ageing. "Whilst the effects of aging are not as dramatic as are seen in women, subtle changes in DNA quality could seriously affect a couple´s ability to conceive, or could lead to miscarriage or even health problems in any children born. "Having a family when you are younger is always a good plan."

http://www.alien-earth.org/news/item.php?keyid=162 & page=1 & category=13

Pollutants Prove to Affect Male FertilityHealth Day

April 28, 2005

Environmental factors may be affecting men´s fertility, a new Scandinavian study contends.Using fishermen as their study subjects, Swedish researchers found that pollutants appeared to affect the ratio of sperm carrying the X or Y (sex-determining) chromosomes.Dr. Aleksander Giwercman and his colleagues from Lund University, Sweden, evaluated the effects of two types of persistent organochlorine pollutants (POPs) on the semen of 149 fishermen. Some fished off the east coast in the Baltic Sea, which is contaminated with the POPs DDE and CB-153, and others fished off purer waters on the west coast.The researchers found that larger amounts of both types of pollutants in the men´s blood was associated with an increase in the proportion of Y chromosome-bearing sperm, which determines sex. The association held even when the investigators controlled for age, smoking, and hormone levels.When Giwercman´s group compared the 20 percent of the fishermen with the highest exposure to pollutants with those with the lowest exposure, the pollutant DDE was associated with an increase of 1.6 percent in sperm with Y chromosomes, and the pollutant CB-153 with an increase of 0.8 percent."This is a novel finding," Giwercman said of the first-of-its-kind research, which was published in the April 28 online issue of Human Reproduction.The researchers did not study, however, whether the increase in Y chromosomes actually resulted in the birth of more boys than girls.Experts said consumers can do little on their own to decrease the effect of pollutants, especially if they live in very polluted locations.The study of fisherman "adds to the ambiguous findings" of what effect pollutants actually have on chromosomes, said Susan Benoff, a fertility expert at North Shore-Long Island Jewish Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y.Another expert, Shanna Swan, a researcher at the University of Rochester Medical Center in Rochester, N.Y., however, found shortcomings in the study. The results only explain a small fraction of the variability in the proportion of Y chromosomes, she said.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...