Eastern Eye (UK)

Research: Sperm count falling at rapid rate

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SPERM count among men worldwide is falling at an accelerate­d rate after halving over the last 40 years, a large new study said last week.

The study, led by Israeli epidemiolo­gist Hagai Levine, updates 2017 research which had come under scrutiny for only including north America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.

The new study includes data from more than 57,000 men collected over 223 studies across 53 countries, making it the largest meta-analysis ever conducted on the subject.

With the additional new countries, it confirmed the 2017 finding that sperm counts have halved over the last four decades.

Between 1973 to 2018, the concentrat­ion of sperm in men not known to be infertile fell by more than 51 per cent, from 101.2 million to 49 million sperm per millimetre of semen, the new study found.

“Furthermor­e, data suggest that this worldwide decline is continuing in the 21st century at an accelerate­d pace,” said the study published in the journal Human Reproducti­on Update.

Sperm counts are dropping at a rate of around 1.1 per cent a year, the research found. More action and research is needed “to prevent further disruption of reproducti­ve health,” it added.

Sperm count is not the only factor that affects fertility – the speed of sperm movement, which was not measured in the study, also plays a crucial role.

And the lower sperm concentrat­ion of 49 million is still well above the range considered “normal” by the World Health Organizati­on – between 15 million and 200 million sperm per millilitre.

Sarah Martins da Silva, an expert in reproducti­ve Medicine at Scotland’s University of Dundee not involved in the study, said it showed that the rate of decline in sperm count has doubled since 2000. “And we genuinely don’t know why,” she added.

“Exposure to pollution, plastics, smoking, drugs and prescribed medication, as well as lifestyle, such as obesity and poor diet, have all been suggested to be contributo­ry factors although effects

are poorly understood and ill-defined.”

Other experts said the new study did not resolve their scepticism about the 2017 research. “I remain concerned about the quality of the papers that were published, particular­ly in the far past,” on which the analysis is based, Allan Pacey of the University of Sheffield said.

While hailing the “very elegant meta-analysis”, Pacey said he believed we have “simply gotten better” at the difficult task of counting sperm, which could account for the falling rates. But Martins da Silva dismissed critics of the study’s results, saying that “the numbers and consistent findings are difficult to ignore”.

 ?? ?? DECLINE: Sperm counts have halved over the last four decades, the study found
DECLINE: Sperm counts have halved over the last four decades, the study found

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