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Male infertility – an overview

By the time you’re here, reading this, you would have been bombarded with scary bits of information that could create enough stress to cause infertility even if you aren’t. The issue here is that information such as 45 to 50% of all infertility cases are attributable to men[1] – or that approximately 7% of all men are infertile need to be viewed alongside the statistical perspective with which, they have been put forth. Here, we try to understand male infertility, causes, diagnosis and treatments at an empirical level before delving into each of them in detail.

Understanding infertility

Infertility in men can be diagnosed due to one or more of the following factors – however, the result of any one of these factors alone will not necessarily indicate infertility. It is a combination of almost all of these that are used for diagnosis:

If you have been trying to conceive and are not able to, investigation with a semen analysis will give you results on each of the above factors. Alongside, the doctors could prescribe bloodwork and other tests based on a physical examination.

Causes of infertility

There is a myriad of contributing factors to male infertility, most of which though, are preventable. Some of the causes are outline here:

The not-so-fine print

Beyond the scare-mongering, you must realise – infertility is not an absolute diagnosis, and in most cases, not permanent. Even if you have a low sperm count or a higher number of abnormal sperm, it is still possible for you to conceive. Although all of the above causes, as well as diagnosis factors are contributors to infertility, every man is unique and these causes and factors affect each of us differently. It is only through a detailed investigation that you can confirm or rule out infertility.

All said and done

Fertility for men is not something you cannot control, and it is not something that cannot be treated either. But before anything else, you must realise there is always more to infertility than meets the eye. The best way forward is to consult a physician or an andrology specialist for a detailed examination and diagnosis. Stressing it out doesn’t help – affirmative action does.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Male_infertility

 [3] https://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/oct/03/bmj-open-sperm-quality-alcohol-five-units-study-semen

[4] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22931048

[5] http://www.fertstert.org/article/S0015-0282(14)00381-1/abstract

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