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Study: Conceiving more difficult for men over 40
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-07-07 20:05 BEIJING -- Men over 40 have more difficulty conceiving a baby than when they are younger, French researchers said Sunday. Doctors know a woman's age plays a key role but the findings presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology conference suggest the paternal impact is stronger than earlier thought, Stephanie Belloc and colleagues said.
Other researchers have indicated that an overall decline in sperm counts and quality as a man ages is a factor but until now there has been little clinical proof that simply being an older man has such a big effect on fertility, the researchers said. The French team analyzed samples taken from more than 21,000 so-called intrauterine inseminations in which the sperm are washed or spun in a centrifuge to separate them from the seminal fluid and then inserted directly into the uterus. The team examined the quality of the sperm and then tracked pregnancy, miscarriage and delivery rates. They found the paternal impact on miscarriage was much stronger when men passed age 40, said Yves Menezo, who worked on the study. The researchers do not know exactly why but said a link between a man's age and DNA decay in sperm that causes it to fragment could be a likely explanation. |