1. The impact of sociodemographic characteristics, lifestyle, work exposure and medical history on semen parameters in young Chinese men: A cross‐sectional study
- Author
-
Liu Jihong, Shikha Upadhyaya Khatiwada, Shi Yihao, Liu Xiaming, Sun Zhongyang, Gaurab Pokhrel, Wang Wangcheng, Yan Jianqiao, Zhang Yucong, and Zheng Dan
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,China ,Multivariate analysis ,Cross-sectional study ,Urology ,Varicocele ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Physiology ,Semen ,03 medical and health sciences ,Semen quality ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Occupational Exposure ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical history ,Medical History Taking ,Life Style ,Sexual Abstinence ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Feeding Behavior ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Sperm ,Semen Analysis ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Fertility ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Self Report ,Men's Health ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
There is an ongoing debate on the declining semen quality, and unfortunately, existing evidence is inconclusive and inconsistence. We evaluated the impact of sociodemographic characteristics, lifestyle, medical history and work exposure on semen quality. Univariate and multivariate analysis was used to investigate the association between different risk factors and semen quality parameters. Total sperm count (p = 0.041), sperm concentration (p = 0.007), normal morphology (p = 0.002), total motility (p = 0.004) and progressive motility (p = 0.009) decreased in men with varicocele. Sperm concentration increased in tea (p = 0.044); progressive and total motility increased in cola (p = 0.018, p = 0.012) consumers. Progressive and total motility decreased in urogenital surgery (p = 0.016, p = 0.014) and infection (p = 0.037, p = 0.022). However, age, coffee and alcohol drinking, physical activities, sleep duration and cell phone use were unrelated to any of semen parameters. Interestingly, semen volume (p 0.0001), total sperm count (p 0.0001) and concentration (p 0.033) increased with longer abstinence period (5 days); normal morphology (p = 0.013) improved in men with higher body mass index (BMI 24), curvilinear velocity (p = 0.042) increased with smoking; semen volume (p = 0.050) increased in manual labourers. This study highlights the importance of sociodemographic characteristics, lifestyle, occupational exposure and medical history and provides time trends in semen quality, its clinical importance and direction for further research.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF