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Dominion 3/09/01
A Christchurch scientist thinks soy products and
vegetarianism may have lowered the worlds sperm count.
To understand where the professor is coming from
we must go back a bit.
The story started in 1992 when Danish epidemiologists
reported that, based on 61 studies, sperm counts had fallen worldwide
in the previous 50 years.
A flood of critics dismissed the study because the
sperm were up in some places but down in others and had been counted
in different ways in different places.
So new surveys were undertaken, with mixed results.
Young Scotsmen were discovered to have only a quarter
of the sperm produced by older Scots.
Parisian men were up, but those in Toulouse were down.
New Yorkers had the highest counts in the United
States but Nigerians were the lowest in the world.
A Californian study showed that nothing had changed
in the US during the past 50 years.
To settle matters, University of Missouri-Columbia
scientists undertook a global study, analysing 101 previous surveys
with great mathematical sophistication.
Last year, the team confirmed the worldwide fall
in sperm counts, reckoning that Americans were producing 2 per cent
fewer sperm annually and Europeans and Australians 3 per cent fewer. The fall has been blamed variously on stress, smoking, diesel
fumes, eating iodised salt, taxi-driving, smoking dope and everything
else.
Wearing Y-fronts was another possibility but a study
on New Yorkers (reported in the Journal
of Urology) showed that tighty whites do not elevate testicular
temperatures as previous supposed.
None of these things could satisfactorily explain
lowered sperm counts.
Suspicion falls most consistently on increasing exposure
the chemicals in the environment especially the female hormone oestrogen,
or a similar chemical used to make the plastic PVC.
Enter biochemist Professor Ian Shaw of the Institute
of Environmental Science Research, Christchurch.
In the latest New
Zealand Science Review, he reports that we take hardly any plastic-making
oestrogen into our blood, but tons of oestrogen from soy products
1430 times more!
He suggests that falling sperm counts have coincided
with the increasing popularity of soy products and vegetarianism
in Western diets.
The professor gets some support from Tokyo where
only 4 per cent of young men are up to WHO sperm standards.
Sperm counts have also fallen here in Wellington
since 1993. Stress? Smoking dope? Taxi-driving?
Tight pants?
Not
likely. More likely our lads have fallen slave to tofu-eating
chic.
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