The Borneo Post

Manual work, night shifts may harm women’s eggs

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PARIS: Women who work nights and do heavy lifting on the job may have fewer and inferior eggs than nine-to-fivers, said a study yesterday into a potential cause of infertilit­y.

Previous research had shown a link between work conditions and fertility, but this was the first attempt to examine how shift work or manual labour might affect a woman’s physical capacity to have a baby, the authors said.

The US-based team analysed data from about 400 women attending a Massachuse­tts fertility clinic. Their average age was 35.

The researcher­s assessed “ovarian reserve” — the number of remaining eggs a woman had — as well as levels of a hormone which rise as fertility dwindles.

They also examined how many eggs were “mature” and capable of developing into a healthy embryo.

This data was compared to the women’s job conditions — how much physical exertion was required of them, and the hours that they worked.

About 40 percent of women said they had to regularly move or lift heavy objects, while a fifth said their jobs were moderately to very physically demanding.

Ninety- one per cent worked during normal office hours.

“Women with physically demanding jobs had a lower reserve of eggs than those whose work did not regularly require heavy lifting,” said a press statement from the journal Occupation­al

Environmen­tal Medicine, which published the study.

Heavy lifters also had fewer mature eggs — even fewer if they worked evening, night or rotation shifts.

The effect was strongest in overweight women and those older than 37, the researcher­s said.

Women are believed to be born with a finite number of eggs, which steadily die off over time — a process which can be accelerate­d by factors such as smoking, for example.

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