What is infertility?
Infertility is when a couple has had sex without using birth
control for 1 year and no pregnancy has happened. It can
be caused by problems in a man's or a woman's body.
What is the cause of infertility in men?
Most often, a man is not able to get a woman pregnant
because his body makes too few sperm or no sperm at all.
This can happen for many reasons. For example, you may have
a medical problem:
- You may have a genetic disorder.
- You may have problems with your hormones.
- You may have had an infection that caused your tubes to
be scarred.
You may have other problems that affect how many sperm you
have.
- You may have been around toxic chemicals or radiation.
- You may take long hot baths or use a hot tub often.
- You may use street drugs or tobacco, or drink too much
alcohol.
- You may have had a severe injury to the testicles.
- You may wear jockey shorts.
- You may have sex too often (every day).
Your sperm may not be formed right. They may not be able to
swim the right way or may not live long. This may happen
because:
- Your testicles are swollen.
- Veins in your scrotum are swollen.
- Your testicles may not have grown the right way.
Sometimes the problem may be getting the sperm into your
partner's vagina:
- You may ejaculate too soon.
- Your semen may go back into your bladder.
- You may not keep an erection.
Some diseases (such as diabetes), some medicines, or
lubricants used during sex may cause fertility problems.
Also, men become less fertile as they get older.
How can I find out what is wrong?
You and your partner will have thorough exams. You both
will be asked questions about:
- your sexual history and whether there have been
pregnancies before
- your medical history
- your use of drugs and alcohol
- how often you have sex
- any surgery on your sex organs.
You may also have these tests:
- A test of your semen. This checks how many sperm you
have and how healthy they are.
- Blood tests. These tests check for infections, other
diseases, and hormone levels.
- An exam of fluid from your penis to check for infections.
- Ultrasound scans to look at the insides of the parts of
your body where sperm are.
How is it treated?
If your health care provider finds a problem that makes it
hard for you to get a woman pregnant, he or she will give
you treatment for the problem.
You may need to do one or more of the following:
- You may need to keep your sperm cool. Don't take long,
hot showers. Stay away from hot tubs and saunas.
- Wear boxer shorts rather than jockey shorts.
- Stop using lubricants during sex.
- Not have sex every day.
- You may need to take hormones.
- You may need to take drugs to help you make more sperm.
- You may need to take antibiotics to clear up an
infection.
- You may need treatment to help with ejaculation
problems.
- You may need surgery to treat a problem with the
testicles or a blockage in the tubes that carry sperm.
You have some other choices for treatment:
- If your sperm count is low, you can collect sperm at
different times. Then your sperm can be placed in your
partner's body when one of her eggs leaves the ovary.
- You can use sperm given by another man.
- Your sperm and your partner's egg can be put together in
the lab. Then the growing egg can be put in your
partner's body. This procedure can cost a lot though,
and it does not always work.
You should know that all this can be hard for you and your
partner. It can help to get counseling.
How can I help prevent infertility?
There are many things you can do to lower your chances of
being infertile.
- Use latex or polyurethane condoms when you have sex.
This helps prevent the diseases that people get from
having sex. These diseases often cause problems later
on.
- Have sex only with your partner.
- Do not drink alcohol.
- Do not use street drugs.
- Do not smoke.
- Stay away from chemicals that can hurt you, like weed
killers and pesticides.
- Avoid exposure to radiation.
- Stay out of hot tubs.
- Wear boxer shorts instead of jockey shorts.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2005 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.