| Literature DB >> 30474562 |
Alessandro Ilacqua1, Giulia Izzo2, Gian Pietro Emerenziani2, Carlo Baldari3, Antonio Aversa4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Male infertility is a widespread condition among couples. In about 50% of cases, couple infertility is attributable to the male partner, mainly due to a failure in spermatogenesis. In recent times, the crucial role that modifiable lifestyle factors play in the development of infertility have generated a growing interest in this field of study, i.e. aging, psychological stress, nutrition, physical activity, caffeine, high scrotal temperature, hot water, mobile telephone use. Several studies have investigated associations between semen quality and the presence of lifestyle stressors i.e. occupational, life events (war, earthquake, etc.) or couple infertility; overall, these studies provide evidence that semen quality is impaired by psychological stress. In this review, we will discuss the impact of quality of life (modifiable lifestyle factors) and psychological stress on male fertility. In addition, the role that increased scrotal temperature along with inappropriate nutritional and physical exercise attitudes exert on male fertility will be presented.Entities:
Keywords: Lifestyle factors; Male fertility; Natality; Nutrition; Physical exercise; Stress
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30474562 PMCID: PMC6260894 DOI: 10.1186/s12958-018-0436-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Biol Endocrinol ISSN: 1477-7827 Impact factor: 5.211
Effects of psychological stress on semen parameters: clinical studies
| First author and year | Population | Country | Stress exposure and/ or assessment | Semen parameter affected | Adjustment | Study design |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stress due to environmental disasters | ||||||
| Fukuda 1996 [ | 27 infertile men | Japan | Earthquake | ↓Motility →Sperm conc | Unadjusted | Longitudinal |
| Abu-Musa 2007 [ | 10,000 semen | Lebanon | War | ↓Sperm conc [Morphology →Volume, | Unadjusted | Cross- sectional |
| Stress due to examinations or other stressful life events | ||||||
| Hjollund 2004 [ | 418 men | Denmark | Self-rated stress | →Sperm conc, semen volume, total count, morphology, motility | Age, smoking, alcohol, caffeine, | Longitudinal |
| Eskiocak 2005 [ | 34 students | Turkey | University | ↓Motility, sperm conc, morphology→ | Unadjusted | Longitudinal |
| Zorn 2008 [ | 1076 infertile men | Slovenia | Life events | Sperm conc, motility, morphology | Age, smoking, abstinence time, | Cross-sectional |
| Gollenberg 2010 [ | 744 fertile men | USA | Life events | ↓Sperm conc, total count | Center, age, race, education, | Cross-sectional |
| Nordkap L 2016 [ | 1215 young men | Denmark | self-reported stress | ↓ sperm count,motility and morphology ↑ FSH→ | Age, reproductive | Cross- sectional |
| Occupational stress | ||||||
| Hjollund 2004 [ | 399 men | Denmark | Work-related | →Sperm conc, volume, total count, morphology | Age, reproductive | Cross-sectional |
| Janevic T 2014 [ | 327 infertile men | Poland | Work-related | Morphology | Age, reproductive diseases, | Cross-sectional |
| Stress due to infertility | ||||||
| Pook 2005 [ | 120 infertile men | Germany | Self-rated stress | ↓ Sperm conc | Unadjusted | Longitudinal |
| Vellani 2013 [ | 94 male | Italy | Self-rated stress | ↓Motility, sperm conc,total count, | Unadjusted (but excluded | Cross- sectional |
| Bhongade 2014 [ | 70 infertile men | India | Self-rated stress | ↓Sperm conc, motility, morphology | Age, abstinence time | Cross- sectional |
Fig. 1Schematic representation of different effect of incorrect lifestyle factors on male fertility