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Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - 727Sky - 11-28-2022

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/sperm-counts-worldwide-plummeting-fast-infertility-lifestyle

Quote:[Image: P6240079-Coloured_SEM_of_human_sperm_2x3...=374&h=561]

Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought
“We may cross a tipping point when most men will be sub-fertile,” says one expert. Here are environmental and lifestyle factors that could increase a man’s risk.
Coloured Scanning Electron Micrograph (SEM) of several mature human sperm (also called spermatozoa). Each sperm is about 65 micrometers long and broadly divided into head (red), neck and tail (blue) regions.
Micrograph by DR TONY BRAIN, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY


ByStacey Colino
Published November 15, 2022
• 10 min read
Five years ago, a study describing a precipitous decline in sperm counts sparked extreme concerns that humanity was on the path to extinction. Now a new study shows that sperm counts have fallen further and the rate of decline is speeding up, raising fears of a looming global fertility crisis.
The initial study, published in July 2017, revealed that sperm counts—the number of sperm in a single ejaculate—plummeted by more than 50 percent among men in North America, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand between 1973 and 2011. Since then, a team led by the same researchers has explored what has happened in the last 10 years. In a new meta-analysis, which appears today in the journal Human Reproduction Update, researchers analyzed studies of semen samples published between 2014 and 2019 and added this to their previous data. The newer studies have a more global perspective and involved semen samples from 14,233 men, including some from South and Central America, Africa, and Asia. The upshot: Not only has the decline in total sperm counts continued—reaching a drop of 62 percent—but the decline per year has doubled since 2000.
The 2017 report[/url] also revealed that sperm concentration (the number of sperm per milliliter of semen) dropped by an average of 1.6 percent per year, totaling more than a 52 percent among men in these regions over the previous four decades.

[Image: M8650104-Graticular_screen_showing_low_h...5&h=808.75]

As part of semen analysis, a gridded microscopic view allows technicians to estimate sperm numbers. Here, 60-70 million sperm per millilitre of ejaculate are seen; a normal count is about 113 million sperm per ml. Worldwide research on male fertility suggests sperm coun...
Photograph by JAMES KING-HOLMES, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

“The decline is not tapering off—it’s steep and significant,” says study co-author Shanna Swan, a reproductive and environmental epidemiologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “Overall the drop is similar in magnitude but when we look at recent years, we see that it’s speeding up.”
Study lead author Hagai Levine, a medical epidemiologist at Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Hadassah Braun School of Public Health, calls the results “worrisome as we were hoping that at some point the decline would be leveling off. The opposite may be true, and we may cross a tipping point when most men will be sub-fertile or when the causes of this decline will also manifest by other adverse health trends.”
Rising infertility
Contrary to common perception, infertility impacts men and women equally, says Amy E.T. Sparks, a reproductive physiologist and director of the IVF and Andrology Laboratories at the University of Iowa Center for Advanced Reproductive Health. “I think the perception that infertility is primarily a woman’s problem may be due to the tendency for women to initially seek medical care for infertility rather than men.” In the scientific community, the prevailing view is that male and female fertility challenges are each responsible for about one-third of infertility cases; the remaining cases are due to a combination of male and female factors.
But the new data suggests a “substantial increase in the proportion of men with low sperm counts which leads to a reduced capability for fertilizing their partners,” says David M. Kristensen, a molecular toxicologist at Roskilde University and Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark who was not involved in the study. “This is of concern for not only the families that are affected but also for societies in general, as many countries such as Italy and Japan are already suffering from shrinking populations.”
Beyond reproductive matters, there’s also a concern that reduced sperm counts are associated with a variety of health problems in men. “There is an association between semen quality and overall health—studies suggest that impaired semen quality is associated with a higher risk of testicular cancer, cardiovascular disease, and [premature] mortality,” notes Michael Eisenberg, director of male reproductive medicine and surgery and a professor of urology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, who was not involved in either meta-analysis.

“One can view the decline in sperm counts as a biomarker for male health in general,” says Kristensen.
In fact, a [url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/andr.12477]study in a 2018 issue of the journal Andrology
 found a higher risk of hospitalization among men who had lower sperm concentrations. Those with sperm concentrations below 15 million/mL—considered low—had a 53 percent greater risk of being hospitalized for any reason over the course of 36 years than those with more robust sperm concentrations between 51 and 100 million/mL. This effect persisted even after the researchers controlled for body weight, smoking, and other factors.
Complicating factors
It’s important to note that the decline in sperm counts isn’t happening in a vacuum. Low sperm count often goes hand in hand with low testosterone levels and changes in male genital development while in the womb, says Swan, author of the book Count Down: How Our Modern World Is Threatening Sperm Counts, Altering Male and Female Reproductive Development, and Imperiling the Future of the Human Race.
In a man, the production of sperm requires a certain level of testosterone as well as the testes’ ability to regulate the temperature of the tissue in which sperm are made, Sparks explains. “Levels of testosterone have been reported to be declining during the same period of time that the sperm production rates were measured in this meta-analysis.”
It’s also important to recognize that it’s not just a matter of what a man is exposed during his lifetime that can affect his sperm quality. What an expectant mother is exposed to while she’s pregnant can affect the sperm concentrations of her male offspring: During early pregnancy—what’s called the “reproductive programming window”—certain environmental chemicals can affect women in ways that could permanently alter the reproductive development of their male babies, Swan explains. “Whatever disruption to reproductive development that occurs in utero is permanent,” she says.

By contrast, the damage done to a man’s sperm during his life—such as by smoking or being exposed to pesticides—can be reversed if the exposure to the harmful chemical stops. It takes about 75 days for sperm to mature, says Swan, which means that men essentially have regular opportunities for a do-over for their sperm quality every two and a half months.
What’s driving the decline? 
 Neither the 2017 nor the 2022 meta-analyses examined what is causing the drop in sperm count, but other research suggests environmental and lifestyle factors may be to blame. These include exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (which mimic or interfere with the body’s hormones), smoking, and obesity. For example, a study in a 2022 issue of the journal Toxicology found that occupational exposure to pesticides was associated with sperm found in lower concentrations, sperm that were poor swimmers, and sperm with more DNA damage. And a study in a 2019 issue of the journal Human Reproduction found that men who are overweight tend to have reduced sperm concentration, lower total sperm count, and fewer motile sperm.
The fact that the sperm count decline is also occurring in countries in South and Central America, Africa, and Asia, according to the new meta-analysis, suggests that the lifestyle factors and environmental exposures that are likely to blame are present globally, Swan says.
As for what’s accelerating the sperm count decline found in the new meta-analysis, no one knows for sure. Levine suggests it may be due to “mixture effects” with chemicals—meaning that when various individual chemicals are added together in the environment, they can have a bigger, more detrimental impact by magnifying each other’s negative effects. Or, he says, the decline may result from “cumulative exposure over time.”
Given that the latest meta-analysis included data from 50 years, Swan suspects the acceleration stems from the cumulative impact of environmental chemicals over generations. Remember: While in the womb, a male fetus is exposed to the same chemicals and lifestyle factors—such as poor diet, smoking, and obesity—that his mother is exposed to while she’s pregnant. But the transmission of these exposures doesn’t stop there—the epigenetic effects of these exposures may be transmitted from one generation to the next, not just from the mother but possibly from the father too. It may be due to factors in the father’s sperm that disrupt the reproductive development of male fetuses in the womb, Levine notes.

As more generations are exposed to these environmental chemicals and harmful lifestyle factors over time, the effects may become additive.
A wake-up call
More research needs to be done to determine what is tanking sperm counts. In the meantime, men and women can try to protect their reproductive health—by consuming a healthy diet, exercising regularly, maintaining a healthy body weight, and avoiding smoking—all behaviors Eisenberg advises his male patients to adopt.
Swan also recommends reducing exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals by being a savvy consumer. These chemicals include: phthalates (in plastics and personal-care products such as nail polishes, shampoos, and hair sprays), bisphenol A (in hard plastics, adhesives, and the lining of some food cans), flame retardants (in furniture and carpets), perfluoroalkyl substances (in nonstick cookware and stain-resistant carpets), and pesticides (in plant-based foods and lawn-care products).
Ultimately, Levine and Swan say that local and global actions are needed to reduce or get rid of these chemicals in our environments. “We should find ways to prevent further decline and even reverse the trends,” Levine says. “We must avoid being complacent about it and fool ourselves that assisted reproduction is the solution.”



RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - Nightskyeb4dawn2 - 11-28-2022

We are what we eat. Toxins, poisons, manmade chemicals, all contribute to a manmade society, constructed, and polluted by man.

Nature sees our mutations almost immediately, and will often start a cycle of adaptations that will eventually allow life on this planet to evolve and sustain life.

The huge problem is that it takes nature longer to correct than it does for us to screw up.

Maybe we do need a huge reset. Just not the one that the WEF is trying to set off.


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - ABNARTY - 11-29-2022

I work on mine everyday. It's important to maintain a strict training regime.

When the apocalypse hits and we are reduced to small villages of survivors, I'll be ready to start the rebuilding. 

I'm looking out for the future of humanity.


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - Minstrel - 11-29-2022

(11-29-2022, 12:09 AM)ABNARTY Wrote: I work on mine everyday. It's important to maintain a strict training regime.

When the apocalypse hits and we are reduced to small villages of survivors, I'll be ready to start the rebuilding. 

I'm looking out for the future of humanity.

MinuusculeClap
Oh Yeah!


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - Minstrel - 11-29-2022

(11-28-2022, 02:06 PM)Nightskyeb4dawn2 Wrote: We are what we eat. Toxins, poisons, manmade chemicals, all contribute to a manmade society, constructed, and polluted by man.

Nature sees our mutations almost immediately, and will often start a cycle of adaptations that will eventually allow life on this planet to evolve and sustain life.

The huge problem is that it takes nature longer to correct than it does for us to screw up.

Maybe we do need a huge reset. Just not the one that the WEF is trying to set off.

While all of this, I count to be true...including the need of a huge reset - I also consider that it is, likely, the WEF (and their cohorts) that are behind all the toxins, poisons, man-made chemicals, chem-trails, over-populationing, etc...

And - If Santa is listening - I would really like to see EVERY single person involved with/in this Cabal stranded without defense on an island, whose only residents are some very hungry Komodo Dragons.
(By the way, Santa - I'm running out of uses for lumps of coal. Angry )


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - Finspiracy - 11-29-2022

@"NightskyeB4Dawn"#10 


Quote:We are what we eat. Toxins, poisons, manmade chemicals, all contribute to a manmade society, constructed, and polluted by man.


Yep. I try to limit my intake of those toxins, poisons and manmade chemicals. I have been a vegetarian for about 3 years now. I do not want the hormones in the meat, or participate in the cruelty of meat industry in general. I think those hormones make males feminine. Teen boys are often very feminine these days. I am not saying that there is anything wrong with that by default. Just an observation i have made. Maybe it is just the current trend and i have become a fart.


Quote:The huge problem is that it takes nature longer to correct than it does for us to screw up.


Are you sure? I think you might be underestimating the capability of Mother Nature. And overestimating human capability to torture her. When she means business, there will not be a single human being left alive. Only higher beings. Animals and plants.

Quote:Maybe we do need a huge reset. Just not the one that the WEF is trying to set off.

Indeed. But i have no suggestions. Sure nuclear armageddon or a sudden polar shift or a killer asteroid could wipe us out. But the downside is, that a lot of innocent, good people would have to suffer and die. I don't want that. So i really dunno. Except i do. I know what would solve all of this mess that humans have caused. 2 things. An alien intervention, or a divine intervention. Not holding my breath waiting for either one to happen though...


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - EndtheMadnessNow - 12-02-2022

Here's a study from July 2022 stating men infected with COVID have one third less sperm compared to uninfected men over 3 months later. Of 100 men infected and not hospitalized, four had no viable sperm. Of 100 men not infected, none had this condition. Small sample size, but concerning nonetheless...

Investigation of the effect of COVID-19 on sperm count, motility, and morphology

Newer study from Germany, but only 25 males:

Quote:Vaccination with either mRNA or Vector-Based COVID-19 Vaccine has no Detectable Effect on Sperm Parameters (PDF)

Background: With the introduction of COVID-19 vaccines in 2021, concerns arose regarding their impact on male fertility. Therefore, this study investigated the effect of mRNA- and vector-based COVID-19 vaccination on male fertility by analyzing sperm parameters in subjects with unrestricted
and restricted fertility.

Methods: In this prospective self before-after control study at a single University-based Infertility Center in Duesseldorf, Germany, a total of 25 male subjects were recruited, who were scheduled to receive their first vaccination against COVID-19 between January and August 2021. Semen samples
were obtained before and after the first COVID-19 vaccination to perform an analysis of semen quality according to the 2010 World Health Organization guideline. Main outcome measures were ejaculate volume, sperm concentration, total sperm number, percentage of sperm motility and sperm morphology.

Results: There were no significant changes in sperm parameters before and after the vaccination.

Conclusion: Both, mRNA and vector-based COVID-19 vaccination had no short-term effect on sperm parameters. Therefore, an influence of COVID-19 vaccination on male fertility appears to be very unlikely.

There you have it and we know the Germans have a lot of experience in this science area. Just sayin.


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - Snarl - 12-07-2022

(11-29-2022, 12:09 AM)ABNARTY Wrote: I work on mine everyday. It's important to maintain a strict training regime.

When the apocalypse hits and we are reduced to small villages of survivors, I'll be ready to start the rebuilding. 

I'm looking out for the future of humanity.

I've wondered bout this. When one considers the origins of species I think the logical conclusion is: there was an environment conducive to speciation. What kind of environment would that be?


RE: Sperm counts worldwide are plummeting faster than we thought - DuckforcoveR - 12-07-2022

As a career plastic "professional" I just gotta say...my bad  Shocked