Naturally Healthy Lifestyles

Problems affecting the Male

 
Male Problems
Female Problems
Treating Infertility
Artificial Insemination
IVF


 

Alcohol and Stress

For the process of fertilisation to be a success, it is vital that the man deposit adequate numbers of healthy sperm in the vagina of a woman. To do this he must be able to have and maintain an erection and be able to ejaculate. Inadequacy in this area could be due to physical injury and / or ill-health - which may be the result of stress, drug taking and/or alcohol abuse.

 

Alcohol contains chemicals which could damage both the maturing sperm, and the man's fertility levels, and seeing that it takes a minimum of eight weeks for the sperm to get from production line to its intended destiny, it would be wise for your partner to monitor his alcohol consumption for at least three months prior to conception.

In some cases stress or hormone imbalances affect sperm production. About one in ten infertile men produce antibodies which make their sperm clump together so that they cannot move freely - this sometimes occurs after a vasectomy operation has been reversed.

Heat and other abnormalities

Just as sperm need to be produced in adequate numbers, so is it essential that they are healthy and capable of successfully completing their journey towards the Fallopian tubes. Production of too few or abnormal sperm, unable to fertilise an egg, may be the result of a virus infection such as mumps, or a sexually transmitted disease that may have caused irreparable damage to the testicles.

Environmental causes such as exposure to lead poisoning and radioactive substances can also reduce sperm production. Heat may also affect the quality of sperm and its potential to fertilise an egg. Therefore, in an attempt to prevent the testicles from 'over-heating', men should refrain from wearing very tight trousers and underpants and should avoid taking very hot baths just before intercourse.

There may also have been a history of an undescended or twisted testicle that was operated on during childhood, or a hernia repair that has left scar tissue blocking one of the sperm ducts.

 

Premature ejaculation which occurs outside the vagina, and so-called 'retrograde ejaculation' when semen is passed into the bladder instead of out through the penis - a condition which affects some diabetics and men who have had prostate surgery, may also be to blame for infertility.