Infertility: Problems With the Man's Reproductive System
Topic Overview
The most common cause of male infertility is low sperm count. Absence
of sperm in the semen is less common, affecting 1 out of 100 men and affecting 10 to
15 out of 100 infertile men.1
Causes of sperm count problems include:
- Hormonal problems in the
testicles or
pituitary gland. The pituitary gland releases hormones
that stimulate the testicles to produce
testosterone.
- Testicular injury or
failure, either present at birth (congenital) or associated with radiation or
toxic chemical exposure.
- Cancer treatment with certain kinds of
chemotherapy or radiation.
-
Antibodies
that
attack sperm and that also may be present in semen. Sperm antibodies sometimes
develop when a man's sperm has been exposed to his immune system (outside of
the testicles). This may happen after a vasectomy, an infection, or an injury
to the testicles.2
- Drug use (some
prescription medicines, and marijuana and tobacco
use).
- Structural problems. These include:
- A
varicocele in the testicles.
- Blocked
ejaculation due to a surgical
vasectomy.
- Absence of a
vas deferens (a birth defect that may be associated
with the
cystic fibrosis genes).
- Retrograde
ejaculation (the ejaculation of semen into the bladder rather than out through
the penis).
- Chromosomal problems (such as
Klinefelter syndrome).
- Genetic
problems.
See a picture of the
male reproductive system.
References
Citations
-
American Society for Reproductive Medicine and Society for Male Reproduction and Urology (2008). Evaluation of the azoospermic
male. Fertility and Sterility, 90(Suppl 3):
S74–S77.
-
Fritz MA, Speroff L (2011). Male infertility. In
Clinical Gynecologic Endocrinology and Infertility, 8th
ed., pp. 1249–1292. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.
Credits
|
By
|
Healthwise Staff |
|
Primary Medical Reviewer
|
Sarah Marshall, MD - Family Medicine |
|
Specialist Medical Reviewer
|
Femi Olatunbosun, MB, FRCSC - Obstetrics and Gynecology |
|
Last Revised
|
December 7, 2011 |
Last Revised:
December 7, 2011
American Society for Reproductive Medicine and Society for Male Reproduction and Urology (2008). Evaluation of the azoospermic
male. Fertility and Sterility, 90(Suppl 3):
S74–S77.
Fritz MA, Speroff L (2011). Male infertility. In
Clinical Gynecologic Endocrinology and Infertility, 8th
ed., pp. 1249–1292. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.