オゾン値が高まると精子数が減少する
オゾンが高まると精子の数も運動も低下するという。
High Ozone Levels Hurt Sperm Count, Study Finds
Fri Apr 19, 5:57 PM ET
By Kathleen Doheny
RANCHO MIRAGE, California (Reuters Health) - Ozone can adversely
affect a man's sperm, reducing their numbers as well as their
crucial ability to move or "swim," according to new
research that evaluated more than 14,000 sperm samples.
"Our most significant finding was that as the ozone level
went up, the sperm concentration went down," said Dr. Rebecca
Z. Sokol, a professor of medicine and obstetrics and gynecology
at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine.
Sokol presented her findings here Friday at a meeting of the Pacific
Coast Reproductive Society.
Sokol's team evaluated 8,513 samples from 50 sperm donors in the
Los Angeles area over a 3-year period from 1996 to 1999 and compared
them with 5,574 samples donated by 35 men from Northern California
during the same time period. The donors' average age was about
25, and most were college students. The researchers also analyzed
data on air quality in both regions.
The greater the increase in ground level ozone--popularly known
as smog--the greater the drop in sperm counts, the investigators
found.
Ozone occurs in two layers in the atmosphere--at ground level,
where it is an air pollutant that can damage human health, and
far up in the stratosphere, where it helps shield the Earth from
harmful ultraviolet radiation.
In these very fertile young men, the drop didn't make much of
a difference. Their average counts were 90 million sperm per cubic
centimeter, Sokol noted. But in less fertile men, it could matter
more. A sperm count of less than 20 million is considered low
and less than 10 million is considered worrisome by fertility
experts if a man is trying to impregnate a partner.
Sokol believes her team's study is the first US investigation
to examine the relationship between air quality and sperm quality.
"I don't think this study suggests in any way, shape or form
that being exposed to ozone makes you infertile," Sokol told
Reuters Health. "It just suggests that exposure to air pollution
is not good for sperm."
It's not the ozone, per se, that is causing the damage, Sokol
added. Ozone, once inhaled, is rapidly metabolized. Ozone may
trigger an inflammatory reaction, she speculates, which in turn
adversely affects the sperm.
"The data is far too preliminary to make any far-reaching
conclusions," according to Dr. Larry Lipshultz, a professor
of urology and chief of the division of male reproductive medicine
and surgery at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. More study
is needed, he said. "It's important to look at an environment
with low ozone to see if there's no effect (on sperm)," he
added.
Next, Sokol plans next to conduct a multicenter study evaluating
sperm specimens from donors in other polluted metropolitan areas
as well as areas with less pollution.