HEALTH Sperm counts in the West plunge by 60% in 40 years as ‘modern life’ damages men’s health

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Sperm counts in the West plunge by 60% in 40 years as ‘modern life’ damages men’s health

Pesticides, hormone-disrupting chemicals, diet, stress, smoking and obesity have all been suggested as possible reasons behind the dramatic declines but experts say more research is urgently needed

Ian Johnston Science Correspondent
@montaukian
Tuesday 25 July 2017 18:00 BST


sperm-1.jpg

The Independent Online
sperm-1.jpg

Sperm counts have plunged by nearly 60 per cent in just 40 years among men living in the West, according to a major review of scientific studies that suggests the modern world is causing serious damage to men’s health.

Pesticides, hormone-disrupting chemicals, diet, stress, smoking and obesity have all been “plausibly associated” with the problem, which is associated with a range of other illnesses such as testicular cancer and a generally increased mortality rate.


The researchers who carried out the review said the rate of decline had showed no sign of “levelling off” in recent years.

The same trend was not seen in other parts of the world such as South America, Africa and Asia, although the scientists said fewer studies had been carried out there.

One expert commenting on the study was the “most comprehensive to date” and described the figures as “shocking” and a “wake-up call” for urgent research into the reasons driving the fall.

Writing in the journal Human Reproduction Update, the researchers – from Israel, the US, Denmark, Brazil and Spain – said total sperm count had fallen by 59.3 per cent between 1971 and 2011 in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand. Sperm concentration fell by 52.4 per cent.

“Sperm count and other semen parameters have been plausibly associated with multiple environmental influences, including endocrine disrupting chemicals, pesticides, heat and lifestyle factors, including diet, stress, smoking and body-mass index,” the paper said.

“Therefore, sperm count may sensitively reflect the impacts of the modern environment on male health throughout the life course.”

Chemicals linked to lowering sperm count include some used to make plastics more flexible and flame retardants used in furniture. These can enter the food chain after they are taken in by plants or eaten by animals.

A diet high in alcohol, caffeine, processed meat, soy and potatoes may also have an adverse effect on male fertility.

Aside from the obvious implications for reproduction, the researchers said the declines were consistent with reported trends in testicular cancer, the number of children born with one or both testicles missing, the onset of male puberty and total testosterone levels.

“The public health implications are even wider. Recent studies have shown that poor sperm count is associated with overall morbidity and mortality,” they added.

They called for urgent work to find out the reasons behind the decline, noting a few possible candidates.

“While the current study is not designed to provide direct information on the causes of the observed declines, sperm count has been plausibly associated with multiple environmental and lifestyle influences, both prenatally and in adult life,” the scientists said.

“In particular, endocrine disruption from chemical exposures or maternal smoking during critical windows of male reproductive development may play a role in prenatal life, while lifestyle changes and exposure to pesticides may play a role in adult life.

“Thus, a decline in sperm count might be considered as a ‘canary in the coal mine’ for male health across the lifespan. Our report of a continuing and robust decline should, therefore, trigger research into its causes, aiming for prevention.”

One of the team, Professor Shanna Swan, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, said falling sperm counts had been “of great concern” since it was first noticed about 25 years ago.

And she added: “This definitive study shows, for the first time, that this decline is strong and continuing.

“The fact that the decline is seen in Western countries strongly suggests that chemicals in commerce are playing a causal role in this trend.”

Professor Daniel Brison, an expert in clinical embryology at Manchester University who was not involved in the review, said its large size meant any debate about whether the decline was happening was probably over.

He said by including a large number of studies from around the world the researchers had been able to “confirm that the decline in sperm counts is likely to be ‘real’”.

And Professor Brison added: “The extent of the decline in sperm counts in the Western world revealed in this study is shocking.

“As the authors point out, this has major implications not just for fertility but for male health and wider public health.

“An unanswered question is whether the impact of whatever is causing declining sperm counts will be seen in future generations of children via epigenetic or other mechanisms operating in sperm.

“This study should act as a wake-up call to prompt active research in this area.”

Professor Richard Sharpe, of Edinburgh University, said the “well-designed and statistically rigorous study” appeared to show that the decrease was “real beyond any reasonable doubt”.

“As the authors point out, the continuous nature of the decline is of as much concern as the decline itself, given that we still do not know what lifestyle, dietary or chemical exposures might have caused this decrease,” he said.

“Research efforts to identify these causes need to be redoubled and to be non-presumptive as to cause.”

Professor Sharpe said that across Northern Europe today more than 15 per cent of young men had a sperm count low enough to “impair their fertility”.

“And, as the present study indicates, this is likely to get worse rather than better as we move forwards in time,” he warned.

He added that this effect when combined with the trend for women to have a baby in their 30s created a “double whammy for couple fertility in modern Western societies”.

“Therefore, looking ahead, I can only conclude that couple infertility is set to increase. Hopefully, this new study will serve as a wake-up call for health and research authorities as well as for the public, and for young people in particular,” Professor Sharpe said.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/s...p-60-per-cent-years-modern-life-a7859491.html
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Soy Beans pig slop is the
Estrogen mimick that introduced as a food filler to humans about 50 years ago


Not only destroying men sex drive and reproduction
It's feeding and creating estrogen positive cancer
And increasing body mass in the obesity victims
 

Flippper

Time Traveler
Exactly Susan, and not just soy, there are loads of xenoestrogens out there, plastic being a biggie. Don't discount the soy in baby formula, I read some time ago that a single serving of baby formula contains the hormone equivalent of 17 birth control pills (even one is too much, birth control pills work by overdosing the body with estrogen).

They have poisoned our water, our food, our air and our soil, it's a wonder we are still alive.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I thought the interesting thing in this article beyond the fact that it seems to be a large and well done study with a shocking conclusion is that the entire WESTERN world seems to be affected, whereas the third world for the most part is not.

Now the third world does have huge contamination issues with people living near open sewers, unregulated chemical plants, mine tailings in the open near water sources etc, etc; which suggest this is the result of something more than just exposure to "nasty" industrial bi-products - I'm sure that is part of it, but it probably isn't all of it.

I do have to wonder about the huge amount of xenoestrogens in the water systems (women and men using hormones who pee them out), plastics in the home (but again third world water is almost always carried and stored in plastic)and the industrial food supply (can't be just GMO's as most of Europe and New Zealand don't use them much, some in animal feed but not so much for people).

GMO Soy probably contributes but it isn't used much over here (it was in the UK and skyrocketing allergy issues were one reason public pressure forced labeling and pretty much forced most GMO's off the market; at least at the supermarket); but the heavy industrialization of food is still going full steam here in other ways.

I hope this study is a wake-up call because it could be a potential Darwin Award for Western Civilization (and possibly Japan, I didn't see them on the list; they probably were not in the study but they have their own fertility issues).
 
Agree with the Soy opinion completely. But have you tried to avoid the Soy? Nearly impossible. Like trying to avoid aluminum in cookware. We've gone to all All-Clad, wood and parchment paper to avoid the Al.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Agree with the Soy opinion completely. But have you tried to avoid the Soy? Nearly impossible. Like trying to avoid aluminum in cookware. We've gone to all All-Clad, wood and parchment paper to avoid the Al.

Like I said, it is hardly used over here and the same sperm count problem is happening in Europe and New Zealand, I'm sure the soy isn't helping but fermented non-GMO soy has been eaten in the East for thousands of years (non-fermented soy is another issue and maybe part of the problem GMO or not).
 

Flippper

Time Traveler
Like I said, it is hardly used over here and the same sperm count problem is happening in Europe and New Zealand, I'm sure the soy isn't helping but fermented non-GMO soy has been eaten in the East for thousands of years (non-fermented soy is another issue and maybe part of the problem GMO or not).

Look up.
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
"Better Living Through Chemistry"

I wonder about effect of Soy products? Not doubting it, but Asian's have been consuming Soy for a VERY long time. I wonder what the effect is on Asian men?

Never ate much Soy, (not obvious anyway) though it has been used as a filler in a lot of products over the years. We definitely don't eat Soy now due to wife's post cancer treatment. Her cancer was estrogen sensitive.

Plastics. Would not surprise me one bit. We now know about BPA and who knows what else in trace amounts we've been and are exposed to. Don't forget Teflon. Everything that sprays out of a can. All the various chemicals that have been banned for one reason or another over the last fifty years

Since WWII we've really gone over the top with chemicals and such. Geeez I found a half gallon bottle of DDT in my FIL garden shed just a couple of years back. "GREAT STUFF!" he said. :eek:
 

Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Wouldn't it be funny/odd/frightening if it were simply the result of forcing young boys to act more like girls - instead of being themselves? A neuro "cause" induced by feminist philosophy.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Can't say its been a problem but then I don't eat processed crap, don't wear skinny jeans, not overweight and haven't smoked since we decided we'd start a family, rarely drink, don't use weed killer in the garden,
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Wouldn't it be funny/odd/frightening if it were simply the result of forcing young boys to act more like girls - instead of being themselves? A neuro "cause" induced by feminist philosophy.

Yeah and the skinny jeans and tight pants won't do them any favours

Diet & lifestyle, the biggest factors in most the problems the millenials suffer from,
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
Ummm...Guys this is not exactly news. There was a documentary called: "The Assault on the Male" Like 20+/- years ago. It may have been done by the BBC. The piece also addressed this same issue using date from years prior. So this is not a new problem. It was aired on US TV once. It made suggested links to contamination from plastic packaging transferring to food consumed by humans, drugs mimicking estrogen finding their way into above ground water sources and that was be consumed via drinking water. The drugs were suspected according to the documentary of actually changing the sex of fish in the effected waters. IMBd gives it a date of 1996. I did not see one in the Youtube post below.

Fair use.
Link to possible source:
(I did watch the whole thing)
Published on Dec 31, 2011

50% drop in male Sperm Count. who or what is responsable. This documentry explores the facts.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=od3NE0y3LkQ
 
Last edited:

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
We have deviated from nature's rule of "the strongest and smartest survive".

The defectives and dumbasses are procreating at a greater rate than better human specimens.

Another leftist scheme.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Wouldn't it be funny/odd/frightening if it were simply the result of forcing young boys to act more like girls - instead of being themselves? A neuro "cause" induced by feminist philosophy.

Spend a few days on this link -> www.ourstolenFuture.com
It covers EVERYTHING

As for your observation - I think Not as much as the pregnancy itself
http://www.ourstolenfuture.org/NewScience/behavior/behav.htm
Open this link ^^^ to view some of the following articles
Emerging science on the impacts of
endocrine disruptors on intelligence and behavior.


During the nine months between conception and birth, the fetal brain is transformed from instructions in genes to a complex, highly differentiated mass of organized cells capable of interacting with the outside world and prepared for learning.

Those first nine months lay the groundwork for all of what happens later in life. Get it wrong, and the consequences can diminish a person's capacity to participate in society and compete throughout life.

Like virtually all development, the transformation is guided by natural chemical signals instructing cells to differentiate, form brain structures, forge links of immense complexity, and even to die (in a process that is thought to carefully prune unnecessary connections). Normal brain development is heavily influenced by a host of hormonal signalling systems. Thyroid hormones play a major role. The sex steroids (testosterone, estrogen, etc.) contribute to, among other things, sexual differentiate of brain centers, and thereby, to the development of sexual identity and sexual behaviors.

Dependent upon natural hormone signals, brain development is therefore vulnerable to endocrine disruption. A rapidly increasing body of scientific research is revealing mechanisms of action, demonstrating impacts of disrupted development, and exploring links between intelligence, behavior and contamination experienced in the womb. What is emerging from this research is that brain and behavior are likely to be the most sensitive endpoints vulnerable to endocrine disruption. Many synthesized compounds in commercial use today, moreover, can derail neurological development.

An important aspect of this research is the realization, discussed in OSF (Chapter 13), that small losses in intelligence might have large consequences for a society if they are experienced in a broad swath of the population.

Follow the links below to discussions of this emerging research, including two excellent summaries (a book and a web report/publication) as well as many individual scientific papers.

April 2003. Exposure in the womb to extremely low levels of bisphenol A alters sexual differentiation of the brain and behavior in rats. More...

June 2002. Mice exposed to bisphenol A at one-fifth the level currently considered safe by the US EPA show altered maternal behavior toward pups. The changes involve less attentiveness, more time away and less nursing. These results suggest that current BPA standards may need to be strengthened by a factor of 5,000. This would make it difficult to employ BPA in many of its current, widespread uses. More...

September 2002. Dutch scientists report that boys exposed prenatally to higher levels of PCBs and dioxin are more likely to show demasculinized play behaviors. Girls and boys exposed to modestly elevated dioxin levels demonstrate more feminized play behaviors. The scientists suggest that that these alterations in play result from endocrine disruption of the development of sex-specific behaviors. More...

Schettler, T, J Stein, F Reich, and M Valenti. 2000. In Harms Way: Toxic threats to child development. A report by Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility.

Schettler et al. report on an epidemic of developmental, learning, and behavioral disabilities affecting America's children today. Nearly 12 million children (17%) in the United States under age 18 suffer from one or more learning, developmental, or behavioral disabilities. Scientific research points to contamination in the womb as a significant contributor to these problems. More...

Laessig, SA, MM McCarthy and EK Silbergeld. 1999. Neurotoxic effects of endocrine disruptors. Current Opinion in Neurology 12:745-751.

Laessig et al. review the pathways by which endocrine disrupting compounds can exert neurologic effects during development. They argue that "because of the relative sensitivity of the developing CNS (central nervous system) to normal changes in gonadal hormone secretion, metabolism, and transport to the brain, it is possible that developmental neurotoxicity may be one of the more sensitive consequences of exposure to EDCs."

One of their principle points of focus is sexual differentiation of the brain. They present original data from experiments exposing fetal mice to chlordecone, diesthylstilbestrol and bisphenol A, and show that chlordecone (but not BPA) at low levels produces a significant difference in a sexually-dimorphic part of the brain.


Christian, M and G Gillies. 1999. Developing hypothalamic dopaminergic neurones as potential targets for environmental estrogens. Journal of Endocrinology 160:R1-R6

Christian and Gillies report on the experiments with 17ß-estradiol and the estrogenic compound octylphenol that demonstrate the ability of both compounds to alter the metabolism of neuronal cells exposed in cell cultures at very low levels. The dose-response curves were non-monotonic. More...



Porter, WP, JW Jaeger and IH Carlson. 1999. Endocrine, immune and behavioral effects of aldicarb (carbamate), atrazine (triazine) and nitrate (fertilizer) mixtures at groundwater concentrations. Toxicology and Industrial Health 15: 133-150.

Porter et al. experiment with combinations of two common pesticides and a fertilizer, exposing adult male mice to mixtures and concentrations within the range of exposures regularly encountered in human drinking water in mid-West agricultural regions of the United States. Exposure was through voluntary consumption of drinking water. They found the mice became significantly more aggressive after exposures. More...



MacLusky, NJ, TJ Brown, S Schantz, BW Seo and RE Peterson. 1998. Hormonal interactions in the effects of halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons of the developing brain. Toxicology and Industrial Health 14:185-208.
As discussed in Our Stolen Future (Chapter 7), RE Peterson's lab has shown that extremely low doses of dioxin experienced in utero can disturb reproductive function and behavior in adulthood (Mably et al. 1992a,b,c). Here, MacLusky et al. show that fetal exposure to a low level of dioxin (0.7 µg/kg or 0.7 ppb) "disturbed sexual differentiation of reproductive behavior, potentiating the expression of feminine sexual behavior and reducing masculine behavior."

They also studied cognitive function in rats exposed in utero. Here their experiments revealed an enhancement in rat performance in maze tests comparing treated animals to controls. Treated animals committed significantly fewer errors.

More...



Williams, C. 1997. Terminus Brain: The environmental threats to human intelligence. Cassell, London and Herndon VA. ISBN 0-304-33857-5. 261pp.
Williams presents data and analyses indicating that millions of people around the world have experienced declines in intelligence and increases in dysfunctional behavior because of two interacting factors: exposure (especially in the womb and early in life) to contaminants and dietary deficiencies in critical micronutrients like iodine. This insight is crucial to identifying barriers to economic development and prosperity, especially in the developing world. More...

The Erice Statement: A multidisciplinary group of international experts gathered in November 1995 in Erice, Sicily, to evaluate current science on the neural, endocrine and behavioral effects of endocrine disrupting compounds. authors.

A 1998 anthropological study of children living in rural Mexico by Elizabeth Guillette and her colleagues suggests that children exposed to high levels of agricultural pesticides have difficulty performing simple motor tasks.
More than a decade ago, Joseph and Sandra Jacobson began a study looking at whether a mother's consumption of Lake Michigan fish, which contain significant levels of PCBs and other man-made contaminants, had any effect on her children. As we discussed in Chapter 10 of Our Stolen Future, they did find measurable losses in motor coordination, short term memory, and verbal skills as they tracked the development of the children born to women who had eaten two or three fish meals a month in the 6 years prior to pregnancy. A new study they published in the New England Journal of Medicine in September 1996 takes this landmark series of studies deeper into the impacts of contamination on intellectual development by documenting significant IQ deficits and reading impairment at age 11 linked to in utero PCB exposure.



Koopman-Esseboom, C, N Weisglas, MAJ de Ridder, CG Van der Paauw, LGM Th Tuinstra, PJJ Sauer. 1996. Effects of Polychlorinated Biphenyls/Dioxin Exposure and Feeding Type on Infant's Mental and Psychomotor Development Pediatrics 97: 700-706.

Koopman-Esseboom and colleagues demonstrate that typical background levels of PCBs in women are having a small, but measurable, negative effect on children's development. In this investigation, the researchers compared a child's scores on psychomotor development tests with PCBs levels in its mother's blood during the last month of pregnancy and found that the children born to women with higher PCB levels lagged behind in tests given at three months of age. More . . .
 

West

Senior
And the vary active, smart, mechanically inclined, and kids that show more intellect (meaning street/woods/etc.smarts.) smarts and independent often get labeled as being ADHD.

Sure those drugs don't help, and I know from mine own experiance, as I seen a 5 yo go from being outside all the time, building forts, riding bikes, tieing his own shoes, eating with good manners, using a fork and knife, etc...

Go from that to a vedio/Computer gamer, forgot how to ride a bike, pound a nail, tie his shoes, use a fork and gain fat in just less than a year.

But oh, almost forgot, his grades did go up, except in math.
 

SAPPHIRE

Veteran Member
Flippper, you are so right.........and what happens when guys/gals stick their smartphones in pockets all day???
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Sperm count drop 'may lead to human extinction'
By Pallab Ghosh Science correspondent, BBC News

2 hours ago
_97076563_sperm.jpg


Image copyright JUERGEN BERGER/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Humans could become extinct if sperm counts in men from North America, Europe and Australia continue to fall at current rates, a doctor has warned.

Researchers assessing the results of nearly 200 separate studies say sperm counts among men from these areas seem to have halved in less than 40 years.

Some experts are sceptical of the findings, in Human Reproduction Update.

But lead researcher Dr Hagai Levine said he was "very worried" about what might happen in the future.

The assessment brings together the results of 185 studies between 1973 and 2011, one of the largest ever undertaken.

Dr Levine, an epidemiologist, told the BBC that if the trend continued humans would become extinct.
Decline rate 'increasing'

"If we will not change the ways that we are living and the environment and the chemicals that we are exposed to, I am very worried about what will happen in the future," he said.

"Eventually we may have a problem, and with reproduction in general, and it may be the extinction of the human species."

Scientists not involved in the study have praised the quality of the research but say that it may be premature to come to such a conclusion.

Dr Levine, from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, found a 52.4% decline in sperm concentration, and a 59.3% decline in total sperm count in men from North America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.

The study also indicates the rate of decline among men living in these countries is continuing and possibly even increasing.
Previous research 'flawed'


In contrast, no significant decline was seen in South America, Asia and Africa, but the researchers point out that far fewer studies have been conducted on these continents.

Many previous studies have indicated similar sharp declines in sperm count in developed economies, but sceptics say that a large proportion of them have been flawed.

Some have investigated a relatively small number of men or included only men who attend fertility clinics, and so are in any case more likely to have low sperm counts.

There is also concern that studies that claim to show a decline in sperm counts are more likely to get published in scientific journals than those that do not.
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Image copyright Science Photo Library

Another difficulty is that early methods of counting sperm may have overestimated the true count.

Taken together these factors may have created a false view of falling sperm counts.

But the researchers claim to have accounted for some of these deficiencies, leaving some doubters, such as Prof Allan Pacey of Sheffield University, less sceptical.

He said: "I've never been particularly convinced by the many studies published so far claiming that human sperm counts have declined in the recent past."

"However, the study today by Dr Levine and his colleagues deals head-on with many of the deficiencies of previous studies."

But Prof Pacey believes that although the new study has reduced the possibility of errors it does not entirely remove them. So, he says, the results should be treated with caution.

"The debate has not yet been resolved and there is clearly much work still to be done.

"However, the paper does represent a step forward in the clarity of the data which might ultimately allow us to define better studies to examine this issue."

There is no clear evidence for the reason for this apparent decrease. But it has been linked with exposure to chemicals used in pesticides and plastics, obesity, smoking, stress, diet, and even watching too much TV.


Dr Levine says that there is an urgent need to find out why sperm counts are decreasing and to find ways of reversing the trend.

"We must take action - for example, better regulation of man-made chemicals - and we must continue our efforts on tackling smoking and obesity."

Follow Pallab on Twitter
http://www.bbc.com/news/health-40719743
 

Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The other thing that occurred to me, is this kind of "study" could be used to justify mass immigration policies.

Assuming the feminists, don't want to completely remove sentience from all males. (h/t F. Porretto)
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
Watch them in a few years come out and say soybeans is 65% of the problem and is used in place of or added to flour and filler in a great many processed foods.
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
Boys in their earliest sexual formative years 10-15 yrs old should not be eating soy or edename (sp?) due to it's high estrogen.

While both sexes have both male and female hormones, the immature, developing human body is particularly sensitive during the adolecent years, where a tiny amount can have an effect all out of proportion to a mature adult body.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Many millenials are no longer eating beef instead prefering chicken which has been laden with growth hormones like oestrogen or fish which is laden with growth hormones from feed or from birth control pill saturated rivers and fish farms,
or foregoing meat altogether for a soy rich vegitarian diet
 
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