Cellphones could make men infertile

Heat and electromagnetic activity which emanate from a mobile phone are thought to be 'cook' sperm, causing them to die.

Heat and electromagnetic activity which emanate from a mobile phone are thought to be 'cook' sperm, causing them to die.

Published Mar 2, 2016

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London - Men who carry their cellphone in a trouser pocket or talk on it for just an hour a day risk suffering from infertility thanks to a low sperm count, scientists warn.

Research shows that a man’s sperm count can even be reduced by talking on a phone that is charging, or even keeping it close by on a bedside table at night.

Heat and electromagnetic activity which emanate from a mobile phone are thought to be “cook” sperm, causing them to die.

For the study, Israeli scientists monitored 106 men attending a fertility clinic for a year.

The results showed that those who chatted on the phone for more than an hour daily were twice as likely to have low sperm quality as those who spoke for less than an hour. Men who used the phone as it charged were almost twice as likely to suffer problems, the results revealed.

The findings, published in the journal Reproductive BioMedicine, also found that 47 percent of men who kept their phones within 50cm of their groin had sperm levels that were seriously affected, compared with just 11 percent of the general population. Professor Martha Dirnfeld, of the Technion University in Haifa, which carried out the study, said: “If you are trying for a baby and it doesn’t happen within a year you might want to think of whether it could be your mobile phone habit that is to blame.”

Professor Gedis Grudzinskas, a fertility consultant at St George’s Hospital, London, said: “Men need to think about their well-being and try to stop being addicted to their phones.”

Daily Mail

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