|
SPERM DAMAGED BY AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES
Study
Published in Environmental Health Perspectives, finds
sperm concentration and motility (movement) may be
reduced in men living in semi-rural and agricultural areas
relative to men living in more urban areas, according to a
study published today in the peer-reviewed science journal
Environmental Health Perspectives. In the first U.S. study to
compare semen quality using highly standardized methods across
several research centers, the authors analyzed samples from
512 male partners of pregnant women (an indicator of
fertility) in Columbia, Missouri; New York City; Minneapolis,
Minnesota; and Los Angeles, California, between September 1999
and November 2001. The results, say the study authors, suggest
that agricultural practices may be contributing to a reduction
in semen quality.
Semen
quality among fertile men in semi-rural Columbia was
significantly different than samples collected in New York,
Minneapolis, and Los Angeles. Sperm concentrations were 38,
75, and 67% higher in Los Angeles, New York, and Minneapolis,
respectively, than in Columbia. Sperm motility was higher in
all the urban centers than in the Columbia center, but was
particularly higher in New York and Minneapolis. Compared to
Columbia, sperm motility in New York and Minneapolis was 74
and 77% higher, respectively.
The
detailed and rigorously applied protocol used by the
researchers supported the differences between geographic areas
after controlling for other factors known to alter sperm
quality such as race, age, smoking, and recent fevers. Prior
studies of semen quality were most often conducted in large
metropolitan areas. The only other published study on a
comparable semi-rural population analyzed semen quality among
men in Iowa City, Iowa, and also found reduced sperm
concentration.
A recent study by the U.S. Geologic Survey on water quality
showed widespread occurrences of herbicides in streams and
shallow ground water in agricultural areas. The authors plan
to pursue this potential link in an upcoming study by looking
for a correlation between urinary pesticide levels and semen
quality in the study populations.
Shanna
H. Swan of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at
the University of Columbia School of Medicine headed the study
team. Other authors include Charlene Brazil, Erma Drobnis, Fan
Liu, Robin Kruse, Maureen Hatch, Bruce Redmon, Christina Wang,
and James Overstreet
Brandon Adams (919-541-5466)
11 November 2002
|
We're
here if you need us!
Consultation is Free!
TEL:
Toll Free 1-866-444-7174
(9 am - 5 pm MST)
1-403-456-2095
1-403-456-2099
FAX: 1-403-264-9606
ADMIN & PLANT
120 - 60 Industry Way SE
Calgary, AB. CA T3S 0A2 |
|
|
OUR MAIN FOCUS IS ON
PROVIDING YOU WITH THE FINEST PRODUCTS BACKED BY SUPERIOR CUSTOMER SERVICE.
|