Men who use mobile phones face increased risk of infertility
by JENNY HOPE
 



Phone the doctor: Men who use mobile phones could face increased 
risk of infertility
HeadlinesMen who use mobile phones face increased risk of 
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NEWS HOMEPAGE 
Men who use mobile phones could be risking their fertility, warn 
researchers. 

A new study shows a worrying link between poor sperm and the number 
of hours a day that a man uses his mobile phone. 

Those who made calls on a mobile phone for more than four hours a 
day had the worst sperm counts and the poorest quality sperm, 
according to results released yest at the American Society for 
Reproductive Medicine annual meeting in New Orleans. 

Doctors believe the damage could be caused by the electromagnetic 
radiation emitted by handsets or the heat they generate. 

The findings suggest millions of men may encounter difficulties in 
fathering a child due to the widespread use of mobile phones and 
offers another possible explanation for plummeting fertility levels 
among British males. 

Sperm counts among British men have fallen by 29 per cent over the 
past decade, a drop which has also been blamed on increasing 
obesity, smoking, stress, pollution and 'gender-bending' chemicals 
which disrupt the hormone system. 

The latest study backs up previous research which indicated a link 
between mobile phone use and sperm quality, but it is the biggest 
and best designed to date. 

US researchers in Cleveland and New Orleans, and doctors in Mumbai, 
India, looked at more than 360 men undergoing checks at a fertility 
clinic who were classified into three groups according to their 
sperm count. 

Men who used a mobile for more than four hours a day had a 25 per 
cent lower sperm count than men who never used a mobile. 

The men with highest usage also had greater problems with sperm 
quality, with the swimming ability of sperm - a crucial factor in 
conception - down by a third. 

They had a 50 per cent drop in the number of properly formed sperm, 
with just one-fifth looking normal under a microscope. 

Professor Ashok Agarwal, director of the Reproductive Research 
Centre at the Cleveland Clinic, Ohio, who led the study, 
said "Almost a billion people are using cell phones around the world 
and the number is growing in many countries at 20 to 30 per cent a 
year. 

"In another five years the number is going to double. People use 
mobile phones without thinking twice what the consequences may be. 

"It is just like using a toothbrush but mobiles could be having a 
devastating effect on fertility. It still has to be proved but it 
could have a huge impact because mobiles are so much part of our 
lives." 

Altogether 361 men in the study were divided into four groups, with 
40 never using a mobile, 107 men using them for less than two hours 
a day, 100 men using them for two-four hours daily and 114 making 
calls for four or more hours a day. 

The main finding was that on four measures of sperm potency - count, 
motility, viability and morphology, or appearance - there were 
significant differences between the groups. 

The greater the use of mobile phones, the greater the reduction in 
each measure. Prof Agarwal said "This was very clear and very 
significant. Many in the lowest group for sperm count would be below 
normal as defined by the World Health Organisation." 

The WHO says a normal sperm count is above 20 million per millilitre 
of seminal fluid. "There was a significant decrease in the most 
important measures of sperm health with cell phone use and that 
should definitely be reflected in a decrease in fertility" he said. 

Motility measures the swimming ability of sperm, viability measures 
whether non-swimming sperm are still alive while morphology is the 
appearance compared to the norm. 

Although the men were seeking fertility treatment at a clinic in 
Mumbai, not all would have had a problem - it could be their 
partners, he added. 

Prof Agarwal said the most likely mechanism was damage to sperm-
making cells in the testes caused by electromagnetic radiation or 
heat, although a fall in hormone production could also affect sperm 
motility and sperm DNA. 

He said: "These cells in the testes have been shown to be 
susceptible to electromagnetic waves in previous research in 
animals. 

"Somehow electromagnetic waves may be causing direct damage to these 
cells and that perhaps causes a decrease in sperm production." 

Mobiles may also increase temperature in the groin, if a man was 
wearing it on a belt or carrying it around in a pocket. 

Prof Agarwal said it was too early to advise men trying to start a 
family about whether they should limit their mobile phone use. He 
said "We still have a long way to go to prove this but we have just 
had another study approved." 

More than 40 million people in Britain are thought to use mobile 
phones. Alasdair Philips, director of the consumer pressure group 
Powerwatch said "It's a plausible link between the amount of time 
spent using a mobile phone and a possible effect on male fertility. 

"The eyes, breasts and testicles are the areas of the body most 
likely to absorb the energy and many men carry their mobiles 
attached to their belt." 

Sending text messages uses less power than talking but it can be a 
more intense emission of radiation, especially on trains, he said. 

"I've seen men on trains spending two or three hours continually 
texting with their mobile phones held in their laps, and they press 
Send in the same position when it starts to seek a signal. 

"This needs a considerable amount of power within what is 
effectively a metal box. We advise people to send a text with their 
arm outstretched next to the window when travelling on a train" he 
added. 

He said local heating of the groin triggered by a mobile phone might 
also be involved in affecting sperm quality. 

"Sperm is very temperature sensitive as shown by many studies, and a 
short-term rise in temperature could be responsible" he added. 

However, Dr Allan Pacey, senior lecturer in andrology at the 
University of Sheffield, said "This is a good quality study but I 
don't think it tackles the issue. 

"If you're using your phone for four hours a day, presumably it is 
out of your pocket for longer. That raises a big question: how is it 
that testicular damage is supposed to occur?" 

He said mobile phone use may be a marker for other lifestyle factors 
known to affect sperm quality. 

"Maybe people who use a phone for four hours a day spend more time 
sitting in cars, which could mean there's a heat issue. It could be 
they are more stressed, or more sedentary and sit about eating junk 
food getting fat. Those seem to be better explanations than a phone 
causing the damage at such a great distance" he added. 






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