Male
Infertility Treatments
By Michael Russell
Some causes of male infertility are sometimes correctable. A varicocele
may be surgically repaired to improve fertility. Treatment with
antibiotics of a chronic infection can enable a previously infertile
man to become fertile. In some situations where substance abuse
is a contributing factor, it may be essential for the male to abstain
entirely from alcohol and/or other drugs and to join self-help groups
in order to do so. Re-evaluation of medications prescribed to treat
a chronic illness may produce positive results. A careful study
of the man's exposure to occupational hazards such as radiation,
lead, or dangerous pesticides may indicate a possible solution through
change in employment.
In other cases, administration
of various hormones can increase a borderline sperm count or suppress
sperm antibodies enough to make conception possible. These hormones
include testosterone, thyroid hormone and cortisone. In some situations
clomiphene citrate (Clomid) or human menopausal gonadotropins (Pergonal),
medications that are used to induce ovulation in infertile women,
may also be given to a man whose pituitary deficiency is the cause
of his inability to father an offspring. In vitro fertilization,
originally used more for female infertility, is being used increasingly
for the treatment of male infertility.
What is being described
as a revolution in treating infertile men originated in Belgium
in 1993, when researchers produced several successful pregnancies
by the direct injection of a single sperm cell into a human egg
in a Petri dish. The important discovery was that men who had no
viable sperm in their semen often had at least a small number in
their testes. The problem was that getting the sperm out of the
testicles required a very expensive operation and an extended hospital
stay.
In 1995, American researchers
found a much easier and cheaper way to extract the sperm: by aspirating
them through a thin needle in a procedure that can be done in the
doctor's office. Even though the needle aspiration is not very expensive,
it has to be combined with in vitro fertilization and the direct
injection of sperm into eggs. The combined procedures, known as
intracytoplasmic single sperm injection (ICSI), can cost as much
as $15,000, an amount not likely to be covered by insurance.
The extraordinary
advantage of this new development is that it has reduced fertilization
to getting the sperm's genes into the egg. It doesn't matter whether
the sperm can swim vigorously or even if it can penetrate the egg's
outer layer. All that matters is that it is alive. Dr. Richard J.
Sherins, director of the male infertility program at the Genetics
and IVF Institute in Fairfax, Virginia and the developer of the
aspiration technique, believes that it should be of the greatest
use to the approximately ten million American men who have had vasectomies.
This is encouraging news because while the vas may be surgically
repaired, this does not always result in the resumption of fertility.
And according to the "New York Times" (6/19/95), even
though the method is expensive, it has resulted in a diminishing
market for sperm donors both in this country and Europe.
Michael Russell Your
Independent guide to Infertility
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