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Men beware! Watching excess TV leads to sperm count reduction by 35%, warns study
Watching excess TV is attributable to eating high-calorie junk food and laziness.
Highlights
- The study claims watching excess TV leads to a reduction in sperm count
- Watching excess TV is attributable to eating high-calorie junk food and laziness
- The research appears in American Journal of Epidemiology
New Delhi: Men beware! Watching TV for more than five hours a day is linked to a reduction in sperm count by 35 percent, warns a recent study.
According to researchers, watching excess TV is attributable to eating high-calorie junk food and laziness.
The findings indicated that the TV addicts were found to have 38 percent lower sperm count than those who had a less sedentary lifestyle.
Moreover, the study showed a link between developing the risk of dying from the blood clot in the lungs due to fatal pulmonary embolism was raised by 45 percent with every hour of additional watching per day.
Sagarika Aggarwal, IVF Expert at Indira IVF hospital in New Delhi said, "Along with the sedentary lifestyle, the chemical additives and acidic nature either harms the motility and shape of the sperm cells or lead to its death. Bisphenol A (BPA) is linked to lowering the semen quality and binge eating in front of TV are at four times the risk of lowering the sperm count, motility and concentration."
The team collected samples from 200 students, all aged between 18 - 22 years, for lab analysis.
Binge-watchers had average sperm counts of 37 Mn per mL, as compared to 52 Mn per mL among those who hardly spend time in front of the TV.
Physically active men with at least 15 hours of moderate exercising or playing sports had sperm counts around 3/4th higher than those who were physically inactive? ?said Swati Mothe Hyderabad based IVF Expert?.
Over-exercising and binge-watching both stimulate the generation of free radicals in the body that leads to cell death and sperm being a cell also has 90 percent chances to die and significantly affect the reproductive health.
The research appears in American Journal of Epidemiology.