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Author Topic: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says  (Read 3655 times)

Brookenstein

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Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« on: March 02, 2007, 12:53:34 pm »
Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
Wet Heat Can Lower Sperm Counts, Motility

POSTED: 5:41 am PST March 2, 2007

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Exposure to hot baths or hot tubs can lead to male infertility, according to a new study at the University of California, San Francisco.

But the effects can sometimes be reversible, a news release said.

"We now have actual evidence to show patients that these recreational activities are a real risk factor for male infertility," said Dr. Paul J. Turek, a urologist who led the study.
 

"These activities can be comfortably added to that list of lifestyle recommendations and 'things to avoid' as men attempt to conceive," he said.

Turek said this is the first published study to show that total body exposure to wet heat can impair both sperm production and motility. Previous work showed that dry heat -- such as from a fever -- has the same effect.

The study looked at 11 infertile men who regularly soaked in hot water. Nearly half saw improvements in their sperm after they spent three months out of the water.

An estimated 7 percent of American couples report that they are unable to conceive a child naturally within one year, according to the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, the latest data available to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine estimates that 85 percent to 90 percent of infertility cases can be effectively treated with drug therapy or surgical procedures. Less than 3 percent require advanced reproductive technologies, such as in vitro fertilization, but those techniques can be costly.

The only previously published study to examine this link was performed in 1965, according to the research paper. In that study, 20 men were exposed to direct scrotal wet heat for 30 minutes on six alternating days. The findings showed a temporary decline in sperm production during the treatments.

The study appears in the International Braz J Urol, the official journal of the Brazilian Society of Urology.

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Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« on: March 02, 2007, 12:53:34 pm »

hottubdan

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #1 on: March 02, 2007, 12:56:23 pm »
Where did this story come from?
Award winning Hot Spring dealer for a gazillion years.

Brookenstein

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #2 on: March 02, 2007, 12:59:03 pm »
Sorry, I thought that info came through as well.  It was on my local NBC station main web page... one of the top 4 stories.

http://www.nbc4.tv/health/11153459/detail.html?dl=mainclick

Webini

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #3 on: March 02, 2007, 02:49:12 pm »
Reason #19 for our tub.   ;D

Zep

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #4 on: March 02, 2007, 04:14:11 pm »


[size=14]Hot tubs hurt fertility, UCSF study shows [/size]

Exposure to hot baths or hot tubs can lead to male infertility, but the
effects can sometimes be reversible
, according to a new study led
by a University of California, San Francisco urologist.

Results from a three-year study analyzing data from infertile men who
had  been repeatedly exposed to high water temperatures through hot
tubs, Jacuzzis or hot baths are reported in the January-February 2007
issue of “International Braz J Urol,” the official journal of the Brazilian
Society of Urology.

Study findings will be available online at
http://www.brazjurol.com.br.

“It has been believed for decades that wet heat exposure is bad for fertility,
as an old wives’ tale, but this effect has rarely been documented,” said Paul
J. Turek, MD, lead investigator who is a professor in the UCSF Department of
Urology and director of the UCSF Male Reproductive Health Center. “We now
have actual evidence to show patients that these recreational activities are a
real risk factor for male infertility.”

Although this was only a pilot study, Turek said, “these activities can be
comfortably added to that list of lifestyle recommendations and ‘things to
avoid’ as men attempt to conceive.”

Dry heat exposure, for instance, as presented with fevers or through applied
external heat, is a well-documented cause of impaired sperm production in
both animals and humans, according to Turek. This is the first published study
to show that total body exposure to wet heat can also impair both sperm
production and motility. Study findings also showed that the negative effect
of this exposure was reversible in nearly half of the infertile men who discontinued
the practice.

An estimated 7 percent of American couples report that they are unable
to conceive a child naturally within one year, according to the 2002 National
Survey of Family Growth, the latest data available to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.

Of those, 30 percent are attributed to the male partner, 30 percent to the female
and the remainder to either both partners or to unknown causes, according to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.

The ASRM estimates that 85 percent to 90 percent of infertility cases can be effectively treated with drug therapy or surgical procedures. Less than 3
percent require advanced reproductive technologies, such as in vitro
fertilization, but those techniques can be costly. The ASRM cites an average
IVF cost of $12,400 per cycle in the United States.

“One implication of this work is that a simple lifestyle maneuver could ‘shift the
care’ from high-tech intervention to low-tech or no-tech,” Turek said. “Couples
really prefer having kids at home and not with technology. This is a way to help
 them do that.”

Turek advises men who would like to conceive a child to “treat your body like
a temple: Eat well, sleep well and take good care of yourself.”

The study’s 11 patients were identified on the basis of repeated exposure to wet
heat and were asked to cease that exposure for three or more months. Five of the patients (45 percent) responded favorably to the cessation of heat exposure and
had a mean increase in total motile sperm counts of 491 percent after three to six months. This increase was largely driven by a statistically significant increase in sperm motility among responders, from a mean of 12 percent at the start of the
study to 34 percent post-intervention.

Of the six patients who did not see an increase in sperm count or motility,
tobacco use emerged as a possible differentiating factor. Five of those patients
were chronic tobacco users with a significant smoking history, in contrast to only
three occasional smokers in the responder group. No other potential gonadotoxic factors – harmful to the male gonad – were identified.

For the purposes of this study, wet heat exposure was defined as the immersion
of the body in a hot tub, heated Jacuzzi or bath at a temperature warmer
than body temperature for 30 minutes or more per week for at least three months prior to participation in the study. Patients were excluded from the study if they
had received infertility treatments in the previous year, or if female infertility was
a co-existing factor.

The only previously published study to examine this link was performed in 1965, according to the research paper. In that study, 20 men were exposed to direct
scrotal wet heat for 30 minutes on six alternating days. The findings showed a temporary decline in sperm production during the treatments, but there were no details of semen quality before and after the study. An unpublished Swiss study
in the 1940s had also linked wet heat to temporary male infertility.

Concern about wet heat effects on infertility crosses many cultures, Turek
said, citing a centuries-old practice in Japan of barring childless men from conducting business deals in hot tubs, due to its believed effect on fertility.

Work on this research was begun by UCSF medical student Phiroz E. Tarapore,
who is graduating this spring. Co-authors of the study are Shai Shefi, MD,
Department of Urology, Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer, Israel;
Thomas J. Walsh, MD, UCSF Department of Urology; and Mary Croughan,
Phd.

windsurfdog

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #5 on: March 02, 2007, 04:21:06 pm »
It may hurt fertility but that is offset by an increase in sexual activity.... ;)
We, the unwilling, led by the unqualified, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful...

Bonibelle

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #6 on: March 02, 2007, 06:01:11 pm »
Brooke is right on target with this one...I know first hand after spending YEARS in infertility treatment!  Tightie Whities...as the kids call them have even been linked to lowered sperm counts. I was wondering when someone was going to make this connection ...and post about it. This information has been around for years. I wouldn't however depend on it as a form of birth control. I think it is only a negative thing for those with infertility issues.  
This is the reason that I limit my boys to 15 mins in the tub just in case there could be a long term effect....
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Brookenstein

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #7 on: March 02, 2007, 11:41:25 pm »
I remember back in the highschool days boys telling girls they didn't need to use protection if they had sex after using the hot tub.   :o  I can't remember what they said exactly, but I wanna say I was told it 'killed the sperm for up to 2 weeks' or something like that.

We had a tub my entire childhood.... but lucky for my parents I was a virgin until my wedding night.   ;D

Vinny

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #8 on: March 03, 2007, 11:23:08 am »
Boni is right on here!

I learned years ago that the heat kills sperm. Wearing "Tightie Whities" restricks the natural movement of the male's sperm producing organ to regulate the amount of heat it needs to keep sperm at optimum levels. And we aren't talking a big temp difference, I think 1 or 2 º. That is the reason that organ moves up and down on the male body.

Males are often told to wear boxers for a while if they are having problems. I would imagine that soaking in 100+ water can kill quite a few swimmers and if soaking regularly could be a problem if trying to have children.

For those who may read and think otherwise ...

[size=14]** DO NOT USE THIS METHOD AS A FORM OF BIRTH CONTROL AND IT WILL NOT PREVENT STD's **[/size]

It's amazing what you learn watching all those darn commercials on TV ... always declare the obvious!

Spiderman

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #9 on: March 03, 2007, 04:21:30 pm »
Quote
Reason #19 for our tub.   ;D

What are reasons 1-18??
People suffer one of two pains in life:  the pain of discipline, or the pain of regret

glfahlc

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #10 on: March 03, 2007, 08:42:07 pm »
that means at 52 i can soak as long as i want without any repercussions...hallejulah

Chas

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #11 on: March 03, 2007, 10:18:36 pm »
Yeah, 52 is not very hot. I think you can safely soak as long as you can stand it.


 8-)
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Vinny

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #12 on: March 03, 2007, 10:23:37 pm »
At 52 you get shrinkage! :o

hottubdan

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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #13 on: March 03, 2007, 10:43:42 pm »
52 F or 52 C? ;D
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Re: Hot Tubs Hurt Fertility, Study Says
« Reply #13 on: March 03, 2007, 10:43:42 pm »

 

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