A regular diet of even modest amounts
of food containing soy
may halve sperm concentrations, suggest scientists.
The study, published in the journal Human Reproduction,
found 41 million fewer sperm
per millilitre of semen after just one portion every
two days.
The authors said plant oestrogens in foods such
as tofu, soy mince or milk may interfere with hormonal
signals.
However, a UK expert stressed that most men in Asia
eat more soy-based products with no fertility problems.
Animal studies have suggested that large quantities
of soy chemicals in food could affect fertility, but
other studies looking at consumption in humans have
had contradictory findings.
The Harvard School of Public Health study looked
at the diets of 99 men who had attended a fertility
clinic with their partners and provided a semen sample.
The men were divided into four groups depending
on how much soy they ate, and when the sperm concentration
of men eating the most soy was compared with those
eating the least, there was a significant difference.
The "normal" sperm concentration for a man is between
80 and 120 million per millilitre, and the average
of men who ate on average a portion of soy-based food
every other day was 41 million fewer.
Dr Jorge Chavarro, who led the study, said that
chemicals called isoflavones in the soy might be affecting
sperm production.
These chemicals can have similar effects to the
human hormone oestrogen.
Dr Chavarro noticed that overweight or obese men
seemed even more prone to this effect, which may reflect
the fact that higher levels of body fat can also lead
to increased oestrogen production in men.
Worried men
However, the study pointed out that soy consumption
in many parts of Asia was significantly higher than
even the maximum found in these volunteers.
Dr Allan Pacey, a senior lecturer in andrology from
the University of Sheffield, said that if soy genuinely
had a detrimental effect on sperm production, fertility
might well be affected in those regions, and there
was no evidence that this was the case.
"Many men are obviously worried about whether their
lifestyle or diet could affect their fertility by
lowering their sperm count.
"Oestrogenic compounds in food or the environment
have been of concern for a number of years, but we
have mostly thought that it was boys exposed in the
uterus before birth who were most at risk.
"We will have to look at adult diet more closely,
although the fact that such large parts of the world
have soy food as a major part of their diet and don't
appear to suffer any greater infertility rates than
those on western diets suggests that any effect is
quite small."