If It Works ... Warming Male Testicles to Reduce Sperm Count
"There’s a reason that the testicles are outside a man’s body cavity. The testicles need to be four degrees cooler than body temperature to make plenty of healthy sperm.""The cremaster muscle contracts to pull the testicles closer to the body if they start to get too cold, and it relaxes to push them farther from the body to cool off if they get too warm.""Prolonged exposure to a warmer temperature will make sperm die. This will show up in a semen analysis as reduced motility [movement]."Winfertility
In the late 1970s, Toulouse doctor and inventor Roger Mieusset theorized that applying mild heat to male testicles would succeed in diminishing the production of sperm. He tested underwear that lifts the testicles toward the body which had the effect of bringing heat to the testicles by two degrees. Sufficient, he discovered, to diminish the virility of fertility of a herd of rams, his test subjects.
Male testicles must be dependent, hanging freely outside the body. Should those testicles be warmed to above 35C, sperm count realizes a dramatic drop. Any sperm count under one million sperm per millitre leads to infertility. It is, however, a temporary, reversible condition, to be used for no longer, it is recommended, than three years at a time. After which, given sufficient wait time, fertility levels should return to normal.
Dr. Mieusset himself prescribed his method -- with the use of a type of jockstrap he devised, lifting the testicles to rest against the body where they are gently warmed, instead of hanging loosely as nature designed them to for procreation and perpetuation of the species -- to a mere handful of men every year. His method, despite its success, was never funded for research trials, and thus failed to receive official recognition.
With the body in close contact to the testicles, heated by two degrees over what is considered normal, over three months when the warming underwear has been consistently worn for 15 hours daily, sterility is effected. In the current social consciousness of the unfairness of burdening women solely with the responsibility of ensuring unwanted pregnancy does not result from sexual congress, men are beginning to take some responsibility of their own; hence a return of the method.
French men are now assuming responsibility for birth control with the use of improvised jockstraps formulated to warm testicles to reduce their sperm count. The fact that no commercial options are yet available to men in the field of birth control, has led them to redress the gender imbalance with these contraceptive jockstraps.
As a result, workshops have cropped up in cities like Toulouse, Paris and Nantes. The theory is that should a man determine it is time to discontinue use of the underwear, a return to normal can be affected following a few months of discarding use of the jockstrap. Effecting a reverse in the same time it took to diminish sperm count production.
Doctors' advice is that the devices not be worn regularly for over a three-year period, as a reflection of the lack of studies in the long-term impact of testicle-heating methods of contraception.
Labels: Birth Control, Fertility, Male Contraceptive
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home