Summary
SPERM counts have been falling in British men for some time and new research from the States suggests it could be due, in part, to our expanding waistlines. A team from the National Institute of Health following more than 25,000 American couples, found that obese men were a third more likely to have a fertility problem than their thinner peers.
Obesity is thought to reduce fertility in men in two ways one physical and one hormonal.See the full content of this document
Extract
Fertility Pays a Weighty Price ; Medical Notes
Sperm manufacture works bes...
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