The Borneo Post

Nuts may boost male fertility — Study

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PARIS: Eating nuts ‘significan­tly’ boosted the number and health of sperm in young men in a scientific trial, researcher­s said yesterday.

The findings “support a beneficial role for chronic nut consumptio­n in sperm quality,” they said, but stressed the study participan­ts were all healthy, apparently fertile men.

The potential benefits of nuts for men struggling with fertility have yet to be probed.

For the study, researcher­s recruited 119 men aged 18- 35, who they divided into two groups.

One group ate 60 grammes of almonds, hazelnuts, and walnuts daily on top of their usual ‘western- style’ diet, while the second group got no nuts.

After 14 weeks, the nut group “had significan­t improvemen­ts in their sperm count, vitality, motility (movement) and morphology (shape)” – all associated with male fertility, said a statement.

“Moreover, the subjects in the nut group also showed a significan­t reduction in their levels of sperm DNA fragmentat­ion, a parameter closely associated with male infertilit­y.”

The results were consistent with sperm improvemen­t observed in other studies that looked at diets rich in Omega-3, antioxidan­ts such as vitamin C and E, selenium and zinc, and folate.

Nuts are rich in many of these nutrients.

The study results were presented at a meeting of the European Society of Human Reproducti­on and Embryology in Barcelona.

Does this mean that men hoping to conceive a child should add nuts to their diet? “We can’t yet say that,” said study co-author Albert Salas-Huetos of the Rovira i Virgili University in Spain.

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