Heavy-duty workouts may impair men fertility
Updated: 2006-10-12 09:16
NEW YORK - Men who exercise to exhaustion experience changes in their hormone
levels and sperm counts, a new study shows.
While these changes aren't permanent, Dr. Diana Vaamonde of the University of
Cordoba in Spain and colleagues note, the findings suggest that exercise could
impair fertility in men with poor sperm counts and low hormone levels.
Women who exercise intensely frequently show obvious changes in hormonal
patterns, Vaamonde and colleagues point out in the International Journal of
Sports Medicine. For example, they may stop menstruating. But the effects of
exercise on men's fertility are not so clear.
The researchers set out to investigate how recreational exercise might
influence male reproductive factors by assigning 16 healthy young men to either
pedal to exhaustion on a special exercise bike four times a week for two weeks,
or to avoid intense physical activity.
The exercisers showed a drop in their sperm concentration, ejaculate volume,
and the number of sperm per ejaculate, as well as other changes in sperm
quality. Their levels of two other hormones -- follicle stimulating hormone and
luteinizing hormone -- fell, but remained within normal levels, while their
testosterone levels rose.
Two to three days after the training ended, hormone levels and measures of
sperm and semen quality and quality had returned to near-normal levels among the
exercisers, the researchers found. However, recovery might not be so quick among
older men, the investigators say, noting that the average age of the men in the
current study was about 19.
Interactions among the brain, the pituitary gland and the testicles control
fertility, the researchers point out, and exercise could have disrupted this
system. Changes in the exercisers could also have been due to inflammation.
Future research should look at how exercise affects reproductive factors in
men with low sperm counts and hormone levels, they conclude.
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