Increase Male Fertility: Reasons and Solutions
It is a fact that forty percent of infertility cases are caused by the male. One of many symptoms of infertility is the fact that one’s partner has failed to bear a child in the course of one year of having regular intercourse.
There are various reasons for infertility, the most common being low sperm count. The average count is from 120 to 350 million sperm cells for every cubic centimeter. Low sperm counts are those that are lower than 40 million for every cubic cm. Sometimes sperm count is alright but the sperm cells aren’t healthy as in the case of those with poor motility and abnormal morphology.
Reasons for Male Infertility
Other reasons for male infertility are poor sperm motility, dilated veins in the scrotum, undescended testes and excessive exposure to substances called xenoestrogens such as chemicals with PCBs and DDT, as well as pesticides and other industrial pollutants that imitate estrogen effects. Congenital abnormalities, nutritional (especially protein) deficiency and urethral constriction are other factors. Infectious diseases of the reproductive parts such as the storage tube for sperm cells, testes, seminal vesicles, urethra or prostate and endocrine diseases affecting pituitary and thyroid glands may also induce infertility.
Increasing Male Fertility
Ten to 20 percent of the male population have low sperm counts. This is the first stumbling block that you need to get around with, either through natural means, and through infertility centers, when the former will not suffice to increase male fertility.
Natural means include lifestyle overhauls such as quitting smoking and reducing caffeine and alcohol consumption. Processed food such as deli meats should also be avoided. You may also want to ditch artificial sweetener. Too much heat can also affect sperm count as heat suppresses sperm production, so you may well avoid long sessions in hot-tubs and saunas. Detoxify by drinking a lot of water.