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Association between ambient temperature and semen quality among sperm donation volunteers in South China

Authors :
Xinzong Zhang
Zhaoyu Fan
Qiling Wang
Xinyi Deng
Ruijun Xu
Yingxin Li
Tingting Liu
Rui Wang
Chunxiang Shi
Suli Huang
Ziquan Lv
Gongbo Chen
Yong-Gang Duan
Yuewei Liu
Source :
Environment International, Vol 173, Iss , Pp 107809- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Background: Potential adverse effects of non-optimum temperatures on human semen quality have drawn much concern worldwide; however, the exposure–response relationship remains less understood. Objectives: To quantitatively assess the association between exposure to ambient temperature and semen quality in South China, and to identify potential critical exposure windows. Methods: We conducted a longitudinal study to investigate 11,050 volunteers who lived in Guangdong province, China and intended to donate sperm in the Guangdong provincial human sperm bank during 2016–2021. Exposure to ambient temperature during 0–90 days before semen collection was assessed by extracting daily temperatures from a validated grid dataset at each subject’s residential address. Linear mixed models and linear regression models were used to perform exposure–response analyses. Results: During the study period, the 11,050 subjects underwent 44,564 semen analyses. Each 5 °C increase of lag 0–90 day exposure to ambient temperature was approximately linearly associated with a 3.11 (95 % confidence interval [CI]: 2.08, 4.14) × 106/ml, 9.31 (4.83, 13.80) × 106, 1.27 % (0.91 %, 1.62 %), 8.20 (5.33, 11.08) × 106, 1.37 % (1.01 %, 1.74 %), 8.29 (5.52, 11.06) × 106, 0.67 % (0.28 %, 1.05 %), and 4.50 (2.20, 6.80) × 106 reduction in sperm concentration, total sperm number, total motility, total motile sperm number, progressive motility, total progressive sperm number, normal forms, and total normal form sperm number, respectively (all p 0.05). We identified a critical exposure period of 10–14 days before semen collection for sperm motility, and 70–90 days before semen collection for sperm count and morphology. Conclusions: Our study provides consistent evidence that higher ambient temperature was significantly associated with a reduction in semen quality in South China. The findings highlight the needs to reduce high temperature exposures during 3 months before ejaculation to maintain better semen quality.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
173
Issue :
107809-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.993149b743c46fe824f6ee15740a0bc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2023.107809