1. The role of oral antioxidants in the improvement of sperm parameters in infertile men.
- Author
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Kallinikas G, Tsoporis JN, Haronis G, Zarkadas A, Bozios D, Konstantinopoulos V, Kozyrakis D, Mitiliniou D, Rodinos E, Filios A, Filios P, and Vlassopoulos G
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Male, Humans, Semen, Sperm Motility, Spermatozoa metabolism, Sperm Count, Antioxidants therapeutic use, Infertility, Male drug therapy, Infertility, Male metabolism
- Abstract
Purpose: A variety of pathologic conditions may increase oxidative stress in semen resulting in structural modifications to spermozoa's plasma membrane that interfere with sperm motility, morphology, and count. Antioxidants are currently being marketed to treat male infertility. In semen, antioxidants may decrease oxidative stress and potentially improve sperm parameters. In this narrative, mini-review we evaluated the effectiveness of antioxidants in infertility., Methods: This mini-review of the current literature has been carried out through searching of the PubMed and Google scholar databases., Results and Conclusions: The literature review suggests that there is evidence that oral antioxidants such as selenium, carnitine, zinc, coenzymeQ10, vitamins E and C, etc. alone or in combinations, improve sperm count, motility, morphology as well as pregnancy rates in infertile men with idiopathic oligoasthenospermia. Unfortunately, most of these studies are poorly designed, limited by sample size, varying in dosage, differing in primary end points, and most notably lacking live birth data. Importantly, large randomized, well-designed, placebo-controlled trials are needed., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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