Sentences with phrase «scrotal temperatures»

Additional studies that are rarely cited in the pro cloth diapering arena have «clearly shown that scrotal temperatures are the same whether the child is wearing disposable or reusable cloth diapers with a protective cover.
Scientists say that the portable computers, when seated on a lap for even short periods of time, can raise scrotal temperatures and cause sperm production to plummet.
According to some studies, wearing briefs appears to raise the temperature of the scrotum, and high scrotal temperatures have been proven to decrease the quality of a man's sperm.
Dr. Sharara also recommends optimizing male fertility by avoiding these situations that can raise scrotal temperatures.
In May 2000, the Archives of Disease in Childhood published research showing that scrotal temperature is increased in boys wearing disposable diapers, and that prolonged use of disposable diapers will blunt or completely abolish the physiological testicular cooling mechanism important for normal spermatogenesis.
Disposable diapers have shown to increase his scrotal temperature, interfering with the necessary testicular cooling system that is very important for normal spermatogenesis.
Dr. Wolfgang Sippell, professor of pediatrics at the University of Kiel, monitored the scrotal temperature of 48 healthy boys, from birth up to 4 years old, using a tiny thermal probe.
Sippell concluded: «A prolonged increase in scrotal temperature in early childhood may have an important role in subsequent testicular health and function, with implications for male fertility.»
In addition, it has been found that the temperature inside a disposable diaper will raise the scrotal temperature in boys to a level that is harmful to their future fertility.
Although the researchers didn't check whether the temperature increase actually affected the men's sperm production, previous studies have shown that even an increase of 1 degree Celsius in scrotal temperature can affect the production of healthy sperm.
In a small study at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, fertility researchers found that men who sat with working laptops on their laps for an hour had an average increase in scrotal temperature of about 5 degrees Fahrenheit, or about 2.7 degrees Celsius.
Research suggests that an increase in scrotal temperature may lower sperm production and possibly affect the ability of the sperm to fertilize an egg.
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