The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Covid-19 infection may reduce fertility in men – study

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PARIS: Covid-19 may damage sperm quality and reduce fertility in men, according to a new study based on experiment­al evidence.

The viral disease – which has swept the globe, claiming nearly 2.2 million lives – can cause increased sperm cell death, inflammati­on and so-called oxidative stress, researcher­s reported on Friday in the journal Reproducti­on.

“These findings provide the first direct experiment­al evidence that the male reproducti­ve system could be targeted and damaged by Covid19,” the authors concluded.

Experts commenting on the research, however, said the capacity of the virus to compromise fertility in men remains unproven.

Covid-19 causes respirator­y illness, especially in older people and those with underlying medical problems.

The world has seen more than 100 million confirmed cases since the disease emerged in central China at the end of 2019.

Transmitte­d through respirator­y droplets, the disease attacks the lungs, kidneys, intestines and heart.

It can also infect male reproducti­ve organs, impairing sperm cell developmen­t and disrupting reproducti­ve hormones, earlier studies have shown. The same receptors the virus uses to access lung tissue are also found in the testicles.

But the effects of the virus on the ability of men to reproduce remained unclear.

Behzad Hajizadeh Maleki and Bakhtyar Tartibian from Justus-Liebig-University in Germany searched for biological markers that might indicate a negative impact on fertility.

Analysis done at 10-day intervals for 60 days in 84 men with Covid-19 was compared to data for 105 healthy men.

In the Covid-19 patients, sperm cells showed a significan­t increase in markers of inflammati­on and oxidative stress, a chemical imbalance that can damage DNA and proteins in the body.

“These effects on sperm cells are associated with lower sperm quality and reduced fertility potential,” said Maleki in a statement.

“Although these effects tended to improve over time, they remained significan­tly and abnormally higher in the Covid19 patients.”

The more severe the disease, the bigger the changes, he added.

The male reproducti­ve system “should be considered a vulnerable route of Covid-19 infection and declared a highrisk organ by the World Health Organisati­on,” Maleki said.

Experts not involved in the study welcomed the research, but cautioned that more was needed before drawing hard and fast conclusion­s.

“Men should not be unduly alarmed,” noted Alison Campbell, director of embryology of the CARE Fertility Group in Britain.

“There is currently no definitive evidence of long-lasting damage caused by Covid-19, to sperm or male reproducti­ve potential,” she told the London-based Science Media Centre.

The results could have been skewed, she added, by the fact that men recovering from Covid were treated with corticoste­roids and antiviral therapies, while the control group was not.

Allan Pacey, a specialist in male reproducti­ve medicine at the University of Sheffield, raised a “stong note of caution” on how the data was interprete­d.

Some of the indicators of decreased sperm quality could be due to factors besides Covid19, he said, noting that more men in the Covid-19 group were overweight.

The simple fact that only one group was very sick – no matter the cause – also needed to be taken into account, he added.

“We already know that a febrile illness can impact on sperm production, regardless of what caused it.”

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