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Journal ArticleDOI

Differences in the Quality of Semen in Outdoor Workers during Summer and Winter

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TLDR
Pairwise comparisons among 131 men without azoospermia who contributed specimens in both summer and winter revealed significant reductions during the summer in sperm concentration, total sperm count per ejaculate, and concentration of motile sperm.
Abstract
Background and Methods. In warm climates throughout the world, there is a deficit of births during the spring season. To determine whether this deficit might reflect a deleterious effect of heat on the male reproductive capacity during the previous summer, we obtained semen specimens in summer and winter from normal men who worked outdoors in the vicinity of San Antonio, Texas, and we performed automated semen analyses with an image-analysis system. Results. Pairwise comparisons among 131 men without azoospermia who contributed specimens in both summer and winter revealed significant reductions during the summer in sperm concentration, total sperm count per ejaculate, and concentration of motile sperm. The mean decreases in these values after adjustment for potential confounding characteristics were 32 percent (95 percent confidence limits, 28 and 44 percent), 24 percent (95 percent confidence limits, 18 and 43 percent), and 28 percent (95 percent confidence limits, 24 and 44 percent), respective...

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Citations
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Descriptive studies: what they can and cannot do

TL;DR: Three important uses of descriptive studies include trend analysis, health-care planning, and hypothesis generation, which represent the first scientific toe in the water in new areas of inquiry.
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Environmental endocrine modulators and human health: an assessment of the biological evidence.

TL;DR: Biological plausibility alone is an insufficient basis for concluding that environmental endocrine modulators have adversely affected humans, and it appears unlikely that in utero exposure to usual levels of environmental estrogenic substances, from whatever source, would be sufficient to produce many of the effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin receptors in human hypothalamus and pituitary: implications for circadian and reproductive responses to melatonin

TL;DR: The relative absence of MEL receptors from the human PT suggests that neuroendocrine responses to MEL in humans may occur by fundamentally different mechanisms than those that underlie the photoperiodic regulation of reproduction in seasonally breeding species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental factors and semen quality.

TL;DR: Evaluating the impact of environmental exposures (pesticides, phthalates, PCBs, air pollution, trihalomethanes, mobile phones), by reviewing most recent published literature suggests that there are strong and rather consistent indications that some pesticides besides DBCP affects sperm count.
Journal ArticleDOI

Semen Quality and Reproductive Hormones Before Orchiectomy in Men With Testicular Cancer

TL;DR: Spermatogenesis is already impaired in men with testicular cancer before orchiectomy and neither local suppression of spermatogenic by tumor pressure nor a general cancer effect seems to fully explain this impairment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Season of Birth in Man. Contemporary Situation with Special Reference to Europe and the Southern Hemisphere

TL;DR: The season of birth in man appears to be meteorologically controlled though minor minima of cultural origin are also apparent as discussed by the authors, and the chance of conception may be tempera-ture dependent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Circannual rhythm in human sperm count revealed by serially independent sampling.

TL;DR: To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of a circannual rhythm in human sperm concentration and total sperm count and if confirmed by other investigators studying comparable populations, the influence on clinical investigations will be profound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deterioration of semen quality during summer in New Orleans.

TL;DR: In this paper, a retrospective investigation of semen quality was performed at a fertility clinic in New Orleans, showing that sperm specimens obtained during the summer had significantly lower sperm concentration, total sperm per ejaculate, percent motile sperm, and motile concentration than samples provided at other times of year.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer-assisted semen analysis: evaluation of method and assessment of the influence of sperm concentration on linear velocity determination.

TL;DR: Semen samples from 77 men were used to estimate the accuracy and precision of measurements of sperm density, percent motility, and motion characteristics using a new, fully automated, computer-assisted semen analyzer (CASA).
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