Semen quality is a measure of the ability of semen to accomplish fertilization. Thus, it is a measure of fertility in a man. It is the sperm in the semen that are of importance, and therefore semen quality involves both sperm quantity and quality. Decreased semen quality is a major factor of male infertility.
A semen analysis typically measures the number of sperm per milliliter of ejaculate, and analyzes the morphology (shape) and motility (ability to swim forward) of the sperm. Also usually measured are the concentration of white blood cells, the level of fructose in the semen, and the volume, pH, and liquefaction time of the ejaculate.
A number of factors may influence the accuracy of semen analysis results, and results for a single man may have a large amount of natural variation over time. For this reason, a subfertile result must be confirmed with at least two further analyses.
A man's sperm are mixed with hamster eggs that have had the zona pellucida (outer membranes) removed, and the number of sperm penetrations per egg is measured. The human sperm does not fertilize the hamster eggs. A negative result on the hamster test correlates with a lower probability of the man's partner becoming pregnant.
Chromatin is the complex of DNA and protein that make up chromosomes. If a large percentage of a man's sperm (greater than 30%) have damaged chromatin, his chances of impregnating a partner are significantly reduced, and if he does impregnate his partner, she faces an increased risk of miscarriage. The portion of a man's sperm with damaged chromatin may be determined with a Sperm Chromatin Structure Assay (SCSA).
When performing cryopreservation of semen, it is the sperm quality after reviving the sample that is of importance, because many sperm cells die in the process.
To be of use in assisted reproductive technology, the sample should after thawing have more than 5 million motile sperm cells per ml with a good grade of motility. If the grade of motility is poor, 10 million motile cells per ml is required.
Home insemination of previously frozen sperm can be accomplished with the use of a cervical cap conception device as a delivery system for the sperm.
In 10-20% of all men, the semen doesn't endure cryopreservation. The cause is unknown. It does not necessarily mean an otherwise bad semen quality.
When a sperm sample is prepared for intrauterine insemination, it is washed at a facility such as a fertility clinic or a sperm bank. Some sperm does not survive the washing process, as is also the case when freezing the sperm.
There are many factors that influence the sperm quality. Exposure to any of the temporary factors can cause up to a three month delay before sperm quality returns to normal, due to spermiogenesis.
Although it is possible for men to father children into their 60s and 70s, the genetic quality of sperm, as well as its volume and motility, all typically decrease with age . In other words, older sperm are less likely to result in a successful pregnancy and, moreover, the cumulative fragmentation of sperm DNA over time makes it more likely that an older father will pass on achondroplasia and possibly other genetic diseases.
Prospective fathers should take up age-related fertility issues with a qualified fertility specialist such as a reproductive endocrinologist.
Sperm samples obtained via sexual intercourse contain 70-120% more sperm, with sperm having a slightly higher motility and slightly more normal morphology, compared with sperm samples obtained via masturbation. Sexual intercourse also generates an 25-45% increase in ejaculate volume, mainly by increased prostate secretion.
This intercourse advantage is even greater for men with oligospermia.
However, the single factor or factors for the intercourse advantage have not yet been isolated. It can not be explained by presence of visual perception of physical attractiveness alone during stimulation, although there may be a slight correlation. Neither does any substantial fluctuations in sex hormones explain the intercourse advantage. It is hypothesized that sexual intercourse subdues an inhibition from the central nervous system, but what, in turn, is the subduing factor is still not completely known. Stress to achieve ejaculation is suggested, as a shorter duration of stimulation before ejaculation decreases semen quality.
Sperm are heat-sensitive, and cannot endure too high temperatures. The body has compensatory mechanisms, like the cremaster muscle relaxing and letting the testicle hang further away from the warm body, sweating and a Countercurrent exchange of blood cooling inflowing blood. However, despite these compensations, there are activities that should not be performed too often, in order of preventing infertility due to heat;
Fever also raises the body temperature, which can strike sperm quality.
In the same way, sperm quality can be lower in the summer.
A blow from outside doesn't affect the sperm quality of already produced sperm cells. Furthermore, the testes are well protected in the scrotum, for example by the tunica vaginalis, making the testes slide away from external pressure rather than being malformed from it. However a hard enough hit can close or crush the capilliaries that supply the sperm producing tissue, resulting in permanent or temporary partial or total inability to produce sperm in the affected testicle.
There is suspicion that many toxic substances, including several types of medication and hormones, and also constitutents of the diet, influence sperm quality. While a few chemicals with known effects on fertility have been excluded from human consumption, we cannot know if others remain undiscovered.
There has been evidence for a general decline in sperm counts in Europe and the USA between 1938 and 1990. While these dates were critiqued, further analysis supported the findings. A 2008 report demonstrates further evidence of the effects of feminizing chemicals on male development in each class of vertebrate species as a worldwide phenomenon; these chemical are suspected of reducing the sex ratio and sperm counts in humans. Ninety-nine percent of over 100,000 recently introduced chemicals are poorly regulated.
At least three types of synthetic toxins have been found in the semen of student volunteers: polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), DDT, and hexachlorobenzene. Leaks of dibromochloropropane (DBCP) have caused sterility in men. Soldiers that were exposed to dioxin during the Vietnam war have given rise to children with an increased rate of birth defects. Plutonium, widely spread from nuclear weapon tests, accumulates in the testes, where it disrupts zinc metabolism, in turn causing genetic damage.
Phthalates, a ubiquitous pollutant, may cause decreased sperm production when having been exposed to it during prenatal development.
The body also has natural variations in hormone concentrations, giving sperm quality natural fluctuations as well.
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