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Mobile
Phones May Damage Sperm?
Mobile phones may damage men's
sperm, Hungarian scientists say, in a study that fertility experts
dismissed as inconclusive.
Carrying a mobile in hip pockets
or a holster on the waist could cut sperm count by nearly 30 percent,
according to the research.
"The prolonged use of cell phones
may have a negative effect on (sperm production) and male fertility,"
Dr. Imre Fejes, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology
at the University of Szeged said in a summary of the study.
Fejes and his team analyzed sperm
from 221 men and questioned them about their use of mobile phones.
They found correlations between the use of the phones, even in
a standby setting, and reduced sperm concentration and quality.
Fejes said more research is needed
to support the findings, which will be reported to this week's
conference in Berlin of the European Society of Human Reproduction
and Embryology.
Professor Hans Evers, a past president
of the society, said the results are interesting but far from
conclusive.
"It ... appears not to take into
account the many potential confounding factors that could have
skewed the results," Evers, who works at the Academic Hospital
in Maastricht in the Netherlands, said in a statement.
He added that the study did not
seem to analyze stress levels, the type of jobs the men have and
whether they smoked, which could all influence sperm count.
"These factors would have a considerable
effect on the outcome of the research," he said.
Britain's National Radiological
Protection Board, which has reviewed research into the health
effects of exposure to radiofrequency waves including mobile phones,
said, so far, the waves appear to be safe.
But mobiles phones have been in
widespread use for only a short time so more research is needed.
"This is an unexpected result and
we will look at it very carefully but the decline in male fertility
has been going on for decades now, before the widespread use of
mobile phones, and there can be many reasons for it," Dr. Michael
Clark, scientific spokesman for the British board, stated.
The World Health Organization has
said none of the recent reviews has concluded that exposure to
radiofrequency waves from mobile phones or their base stations
damages health, but stresses that more studies are needed.
Reference
Source 89
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