The Asian Age

Low sperm count may signal poor health: Research

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London, March 19: Men with low sperm count are more likely to have a number of health issues that put them at increased risk of illness, a study has found.

The research on 5,177 men in Italy evaluated semen quality, reproducti­ve function and metabolic risk in males referred for fertility evaluation.

“Our study clearly shows that low sperm count by itself is associated with metabolic alteration­s, cardiovasc­ular risk and low bone mass,” said Alberto Ferlin, who carried the study at University of Padova in Italy.

“Infertile men are likely to have important coexisting health problems or risk factors that can impair quality of life and shorten their lives,” said Ferlin, now an associate professor at University of Brescia in Italy.

“Fertility evaluation gives men the unique opportunit­y for health assessment and disease prevention,” he said.

In the study, about half the men had low sperm counts and were 1.2 times more likely than those with normal sperm counts to have greater body fat ( bigger waistline and higher body mass index, or BMI).

They were also more likely to have higher blood pressure, “bad” ( LDL) cholestero­l and triglyceri­des, and lower “good” ( HDL) cholestero­l.

They also had a higher frequency of metabolic syndrome, a cluster of these and other metabolic risk factors that increase the chance of developing diabetes, heart disease and stroke, the researcher­s said.

A measure of insulin resistance, another problem that can lead to diabetes, also was higher in men with low sperm counts, they said.

Low sperm count was defined as less than 39 million per ejaculate.

The researcher­s found a 12- fold increased risk of hypogonadi­sm, or low testostero­ne levels, in men with low sperm counts.

Half the men with low testostero­ne had osteoporos­is or low bone mass, a possible precursor to osteoporos­is, as found on a bone density scan.

These findings, according to Ferlin, suggest that low sperm count of itself is associated with poorer measures of cardiometa­bolic health but that hypogonadi­sm is mainly involved in this associatio­n.

He cautioned that their study does not prove that low sperm counts cause metabolic derangemen­ts, but rather that sperm quality is a mirror of the general male health.

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