But is he damaging his chances of
fathering a child? (Reuters / Jason Lee)
|
Vegetarian men may be harming their
chances of conceiving children, a multi-year US study has revealed.
RT news reports monitored by
GRAPHITTI NEWS says researchers believe the reasons may include vitamin
deficiencies and the presence of female hormones in soy, which is popular among
vegetarians.
Noting that Seventh-Day Adventists,
members of a strict Protestant sect, live 10 years longer than average
Americans, researchers at Loma Linda University, itself a Seventh-Day Adventist
institution, hypothesized that diet was a possible reason. Many of the sect’s
followers are encouraged to go vegetarian, as most meat is considered “unclean.”
For the experiment, researchers
monitored 443 meat-eaters and 31 vegetarians and vegans between 2009 and 2013,
initially assuming that the vegetarians’ sperm would be healthier, and a
contributing factor to the longevity of their offspring.
But the results, to be published in
Fertility and Sterility journal on Wednesday, came as a surprise.
“We found that
diet does significantly affect sperm quality. Vegetarian and vegan diets were
associated with much lower sperm counts than omnivorous diets,” said lead study author Eliza Orzylowska. “Although these people are
not infertile, it is likely to play a factor in conception, particularly for
couples who are trying to conceive naturally, the old-fashioned way.”
Vegetarians had 30 percent lower
concentrations of sperm – 50 million per milliliter, versus 70 million per
milliliter. Their motility - the vitality of the sperm – was also lower, with a
third of sperm active, versus 60 percent for the meat eaters. Significantly,
vegans fared worst of all.
Orzylowska believes that the reason
could be soy, which was shown in a study
three years ago to shrink the sperm count. The reason is a high content of
phyto-estrogen, which mimics a female hormone, and impedes sperm production.
“For children
who have grown up with those kind of diets, it may have impacted on sperm
quality from puberty,” said
Orzylowska.
“It’s hard to
tell people not to be vegetarians if they are trying to conceive, but I would
caution against using soy, at least for 74 days beforehand, which is the time
it takes for sperm to be replaced.”
A second potential explanation put
forward by Orzylowska is the shortage of B12, a vitamin that helps to break
down estrogen, thus maintaining a high sperm count. With its highest
concentrations found in beef and fish, many vegetarians who do not take
supplements may be missing out.
Soybean
plantation (AFP Photo / Norberto Duarte)
|
Another parallel, but independent,
longitudinal study conducted by Harvard scientists and published by the
American Society for Reproductive medicine this week has identified pesticides
as a potential cause of reduced fertility among vegetarians.
Between 2007 and 2012 the scientists
studied the sperm of 155 men at the Massachusetts General Hospital, measured
how much fruit they consumed, and whether those fruit came from areas with a
high level of pesticide residue.
The quarter of men who consumed the
most fruit and vegetables with a high pesticide residue had a 70 percent
smaller count of motile sperm, and 64 percent smaller count of normally-shaped
sperm than the quarter of men who consumed the least pesticide-tainted fruit
and vegetables.
“Men who want to optimize their reproductive
health need to take care take care to choose fruits and vegetables grown with
lower levels of pesticides, which are less contaminated. Nutrition is important
to good reproductive health, but food that is good for you can contain other
substances, not so good for you,”
commented Paul J. Turek, president of the Society for Male Reproduction and
Infertility.
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