Male Fertility
A man’s fertility is just as important to conception as a woman’s, although this is often overlooked by anyone in the fertility field. Both of you need to be in optimum health when you and your partner are trying to conceive. Very often, problems in conception are thought to be wholly the woman’s, but this is not the case. The problem is only the wowen’s in around 35 to 40 per cent of cases and with the man between 30 and 35 per cent of the time. Problems that arise from combined difficulties in both partners account for the other 25 to 35 per cent of cases.
Even if the semen analysis is good, good sperm genetic health and metabolic fitness can always be improved by cutting down on lifestyle factors that are known to harm the sperm – ways to get the best sperm are found within this program.
The seminal fluid that combines with sperm to form semen is composed of more than 22 different chemicals, including sugar, vitamin C, E and B12, prostaglandins (which help stimulate muscle contractions and that dilatation of blood vessels), the minerals zinc, potassium and sulphur, and essential fatty acids (namely DHA). Altogether, ejaculate consists of around 2 to 4ml of semen, which is quite viscous at first but then liquefies after about 10 minutes. Sperm need to be nourished by this liquid on their journey and protected form the acidic environment of the woman’s vagina, before any of them can reach an egg. Around 250 million sperm are ejaculated each time, but it takes only one to fertilize an egg.
Why this enormous quantity of sperm? Only a certain proportion – and this varies from man to man – will be normal, active enough and capable of fertilizing an egg in the first place. Then, because the woman’s vagina is acidic, and hostile to sperm, treating it as it would any other ‘foreign body’ and attempting to get rid of it, as it would an infection, this also reduces the available sperm. From here, only around a million will actually get as far as the women’s cervix, and only around 200 of these, at most, will reach the woman’s fallopian tube to fertilize an egg.
If you then consider how many of the remaining sperm are actually of a good enough quality to fertilize an egg – and in sperm analysis only a maximum of 20 per cent pass this test – it’s no wonder that fertilization can be a difficult to achieve – this baby making program can help you.
And even if fertilization does occur, if the sperm responsible is faulty in some way then development of the fertilized egg can’t continue, and miscarriage may be the outcome. – This fertility program can help you.
In semen analysis, Sperm may look fantastic but there may be infections or DNA fragmentation, which will not show up on semen analysis. Further work needs to be done on most men’s sperm. These ways to fix sperm are found within this program.