Friday, August 31, 2007

Reduce Male Infertility: The Male Infertility Evaluation

Reduces Male Infertility and Increases Sperm Volume by 500%...!


Description
Fifteen to 20% of couples report infertility or no pregnancy after having unprotected sexual intercourse for several months. Since nearly 50% of infertility cases

are attributable to the male partner, the evaluation and treatment of the male is extremely important. Many of the causes of Male Infertility are

treatable and will be identified after a careful history and physical examination.
Causes
1. Varicocele, a cystic swelling around the veins leading to the testes, occurs in approximately 40% of men undergoing an infertility examination. 2. Disorders

of the testes 3. Chromosomal or gene abnormalities 4. Congenital abnormalities of the male reproductive system, e.g., blockage of the tubes that carry the

sperm 5. Hormone deficiency 6. Infections of the urethra, prostrate, and epididymis (usually treatable) 7. History of mumps and inflammation in both testes

(orchitis) 8. Injuries to the male reproductive system, e.g., torsion (twisting) of a testis 9. Surgery to the male reproductive system, e.g., vasectomy reversal 10.

Radiation injury 11. Toxins, e.g., alcohol, tobacco, insecticides, metals, drugs 12. Medications 13. Immune disorders, e.g., insulin-dependent diabetes 14.

Chronic diseases, e.g., kidney failure, liver diseases, sickle cell disease

Symptoms
1. None 2. Pain in the case of torsion or infection 3. Discharge from the urethra 4. Infertility is often first indication of a problem.

Diagnosis
1. History 2. Physical examination 3. Semen analysis: the number, condition of the sperm, motility, and appearance 4. Hormonal analysis, specifically, the sex

hormones such as testosterone 5. Blood and urinalysis 6. Ultrasound 7. A needle biopsy of testicles is sometimes necessary.

Treatment
Dependent on the cause may involve one or more of the following:
1. Antibiotics to treat infection 2. Surgery to correct defect, e.g., varicocele 3. Hormone replacement 4. Artificial insemination after concentrating the sperm 5.

Isolation of the male's genome
Advances in the treatment of Male Infertility are occurring rapidly, so ask your urologist about the latest treatments to be infertile means to be unable

to beget children. From the medical standpoint, a couple is considered to be infertile if there has been no pregnancy after one to one-and-half years of

unprotected sexual intercourse.
For the fertility process to proceed smoothly, both the man and the woman should be healthy and normal. Unfortunately, this aspect of conception is not known

to most people. Traditionally (and very wrongly), it is the woman who is always blamed when a couple can't have a child. The investigation for infertility begins

and ends with evaluation of the wife alone. Thus, a woman is often subjected to a D & C, laparoscopy etc. only to be told at the end of it all that everything is

normal. It is not uncommon, in fact, for a man to divorce, not one but several wives under the mistaken (and chauvinistic) belief that she alone is responsible

for the `barrenness'. Needless to say such men do not beget children even after several marriages !!
One would ordinarily imagine that in country like India, which already has a population in excess of 980 million, child-bearing should be an effortless

endeavour for human beings. This, however, is not true. Quite unrelated to the national population figure is the prevalence of infertility.


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