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Concern

  Evaluating Your Fertility
  Understanding Fertility
  Maximise Your Fertility
  Infertility: An Introduction
  Infertility in Females
  Infertility in Males
  Sperm Disorders
  Absence of Sperm
  Reduced Sperm
  Sperm Abnormalities
  Antisperm Antibodies
  Anatomical
  Implications of Infertility
  Questions to Ask Your Doctor
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Reduced Sperm

Oligospermia: Reduced Sperm
 
Oligospermia is a reduced number of spermatozoa. Common causes include:
  • Hormonal problems: which are more often a cause of oligospermia than azoospermia. 
  • Obstruction: which can cause oligospermia as well as azoospermia. 
  • Side effects of drug treatments: such as sulphasalazine, which is used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (can cause reversible oligospermia). 
  • Environmental factors: such as smoking and excessive alcohol consumption, can adversely affect sperm production. Frequent hot baths or saunas could also reduce sperm count, as the testes are normally maintained at a temperature about 1oC below body temperature. Hyperthermia as a result of viral infections may also cause a usually temporary reduction in sperm count. 
  • Infection: which is a recognized cause of male infertility. The presence of an alkaline semen and of pus cells in the ejaculate is very significant in its diagnosis, and treatment with appropriate antibiotics usually restores fertility, unless the infection is so severe that the patient has been rendered sterile.     
In some cases, the sperm are malformed or their lifespan after ejaculation is too short for them to travel far enough to reach the egg. Defects in the sperm may be due to a blockage of, or damage to, the spermatic ducts, usually due to a sexually transmitted disease such as gonorrhoea. A varicocele (see below) may also be a factor. Abnormal development of the testes due to an endocrine disorder, such as hypogonadism (see Sperm Abnormalities), may also cause defective sperm. Toxins, cigarettes or various drugs can all lower the sperm count.  



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