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Selasa, 27 April 2010

Leave the phone, it's in your best interest

In a study of 361 men seen at their infertility clinic, researchers at the Cleveland Clinic found an association between the patients' cellphone use and their sperm quality.

On average, the more hours the men spent on their cellphones each day, the lower their sperm count and the greater their percentage of abnormal sperm.

The findings, published in the journal Fertility and Sterility, add to questions about the potential health effects of cellphones and other wireless devices. Some studies, for example, have linked long-term cellphone use to a higher risk of brain tumours, though many other studies have found no such connection.

The concern is that, over time, the electromagnetic energy emitted from mobile phones could theoretically harm body tissue - by damaging DNA, for example.

However, the new findings do not prove that cellphones somehow damage sperm, according to the researchers.

"Our results show a strong association of cellphone use with decreased semen quality. However, they do not prove a cause-and- effect relationship," lead researcher Dr. Ashok Agarwal told Reuters Health.

He and his colleagues based their findings on semen samples from 361 men who came to their infertility clinic over one year. All of the men were questioned about their cellphone habits.

In general, the researchers found, sperm count and sperm quality tended to decline as daily cellphone hours increased. Men who said they used their phones for more than four hours each day had the lowest average sperm count and the fewest normal, viable sperm.

"We infer from our results that heavy cellphone use... is associated with a lower semen quality," Agarwal said. But whether cellphones somehow directly affect men's fertility is not clear.

Agarwal said he and his colleagues have two studies underway aiming to shed light on the issue. In one, they are exposing semen samples to electromagnetic radiation from cellphones to see what, if any, effects occur.

The second is a follow-up to the current study that is assessing a larger group of men. Agarwal said this study is more rigorously designed and will account for certain other factors like lifestyle habits and occupational exposures that might affect sperm quality.


Source : Babynet

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