Human exposure to aluminum may be a significant factor in falling sperm counts and reduced male fertility, new research suggests.
Fluorescence microscopy using an aluminum-specific stain confirmed the presence of aluminum in semen and showed aluminum inside individual sperm.
And the team of scientists, at the universities of Lyon and Saint-Etienne in France and Keele in the UK, found that the higher the aluminum, the lower sperm count.
The research, led by Professor Christopher Exley, a leading authority on human exposure to aluminum at Keele, and Professor Michele Cottier, a specialist in cytology and histology at Saint-Etienne, measured the aluminum content of semen from 62 donors at a French clinic.
Professor Exley said: "There has been a significant decline in male fertility, including sperm count, throughout the developed world over the past several decades and previous research has linked this to environmental factors such as endocrine disruptors.
"Human exposure to aluminum has increased significantly over the same time period and our observation of significant contamination of male semen by aluminum must implicate aluminum as a potential contributor to these changes in reproductive fertility."
The mean aluminum content for all 62 donors was found to be very high at 339 ppb with the aluminum content of semen from several donors being in excess of 500 ppb. A statistically significant inverse relationship was found between the aluminum content of semen and the sperm count. Higher aluminum resulted in a lower sperm count.
GMT 08:29 2018 Sunday ,21 January
Hot air? Study finds bikram no healthier than other yogaGMT 05:12 2018 Saturday ,13 January
'How much do you earn?' Germany takes on gender pay gapGMT 02:56 2017 Friday ,15 December
Will Trump send Americans to the Moon? Money talksGMT 04:01 2017 Saturday ,18 November
What is the Paris Agreement?GMT 07:05 2017 Thursday ,09 November
Could the peatlands of Congo be a carbon bomb?GMT 04:49 2017 Wednesday ,13 September
So how do mega-storms get named, anyhow?GMT 16:43 2017 Wednesday ,09 August
Want to learn something? Sleep on it, but not too deeplyGMT 21:25 2017 Monday ,31 July
Is 'diesel summit' the last chance for Germany's favourite engine?Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor