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2013
Of the 10–20 % of infertile couples, 20 % are purely male factor and 30 % are combined male and female factors. Risk factors include trauma or torsion of the testes, erectile dysfunction, low testosterone, varicocele, and exposure to toxins including chemotherapy, tobacco, and alcohol abuse.
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Of the 10–20 % of infertile couples, 20 % are purely male factor and 30 % are combined male and female factors. Risk factors include trauma or torsion of the testes, erectile dysfunction, low testosterone, varicocele, and exposure to toxins including chemotherapy, tobacco, and alcohol abuse.
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Cancer Risk in Male Factor-infertility
Placenta, 2008Severe forms of male-factor infertility are associated with an increased risk of testicular cancer and scrotal ultrasonography is widely used for diagnosis. In this study, 2172 male members of infertile couples referred to our Reproductive Medicine Unit were submitted to scrotal ultrasonography and 835 selected patients had been followed during a 2 ...
L, Negri +5 more
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Male Factors in Couple’s Infertility
2014The main causes of male infertility are testicular insufficiency due to congenital and acquired causes, obstructions of the male genital tract, genetic and endocrine abnormalities, urogenital infections and varicoceles. Also lifestyle can have a negative influence on semen quality: smoking, obesity, drugs and anabolic steroids influence sperm ...
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Extra Testicular Factors in Male Infertility.
Acta Clinica Belgica, 1978SummaryThe male partner is the cause of childlessness in about one out of two barren couples. He may be completely infertile; however in most eases subfertility is found.Subfertility is the result of either intrinsic testicular deficiency in spermatogenesis, or general (endocrine) disease.
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Management Strategies for Male Factor Infertility
Drugs, 2002Although modern assisted reproduction techniques contribute a lot to overcoming severe male factor infertility, application of these methods in every infertile couple would represent an over-treatment. Therefore, conventional treatment modalities are still the first approach to male fertility disorders.
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Male-Factor Infertility: Factoring in the Male Experience
2018While long underappreciated, male-factor infertility and men’s experiences of infertility and infertility treatment have increasingly gained attention in the social and psychological sciences. While women have traditionally been reported to experience more infertility-related stress than men, research consistently reports this finding to be confounded ...
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