Firm confidence to repel necrospermia
It is inevitable to have a certain amount of abnormal sperm in the sperm. It is generally believed that within 10%, it can be considered normal, while exceeding 10% or even reaching 20% can affect fertility, as this situation is often accompanied by poor liquefaction, low vitality, and other semen quality issues. If the number of dead sperm exceeds 40%, it will affect conception. If there are no viable sperm within 6 hours, it can cause infertility.
Although azoospermia can cause male infertility, it is not incurable. As long as the patient cooperates with the doctor in a timely manner to identify the cause of the disease, and actively treats the cause, it can still be cured.
Due to the diverse causes, there are also various treatment methods. But no matter what treatment is used, the most important thing is to improve the environmental conditions for sperm survival, which means first eliminating various external factors that affect sperm production, generation, and maturation. This is related to the treatment of various primary diseases. On the basis of various primary disease treatments, or after the primary disease is cured, drugs are needed to increase the number of sperm, nourish sperm, promote their development, supplement the energy required for sperm movement, and mature them into healthy and qualified sperm.
How does necrospermia occur?
Dead sperm syndrome refers to multiple semen tests that show no abnormal sperm morphology and normal sperm density, but the vast majority of sperm are dead.
Under normal circumstances, within 1 hour of semen being expelled from the body, over 70% of normal surviving sperm should be present. If the number of dead sperm exceeds 40%, it will affect conception. Generally speaking, the causes of dead sperm are multifaceted, but there are mainly three aspects:
1. Inflammation of the reproductive organs can cause congestion and edema, blood stasis, and ischemia and hypoxia, leading to sperm death.
2. Chronic seminal vesiculitis results in reduced fructose secretion and sperm death.
3. When orchitis, epididymitis, prostatitis, especially chronic prostatitis, the secretion is affected and the trace element zinc is reduced, which affects sperm metabolism and leads to death.
The clinical manifestations of this disease are quite inconsistent. Some patients have no clinical symptoms, some patients may have a history of chronic prostatitis, orchitis, seminal vesiculitis, etc. Some patients may have premature ejaculation or low libido, and the diagnosis is mainly based on semen tests. Generally speaking, those who do not undergo semen tests and have a sperm count of more than 40% are called oligozoospermia.