CAUSE OF CONCERN FOR MEN
Facts that
should convince men to get more rest.
Posted Jun 10, 2019
Many famous men have bragged about getting by on just 4 to 6
hours of sleep a night, including President Trump, Elon Musk, and Richard
Branson. You probably already know that experts say that closer to eight hours
of sleep is necessary for good mental and physical health. But did you know
it’s also a requirement of good sperm health?
Here are three facts about sleep and male virility that are sure
to convince any man he needs a solid 8 hours.
1. Sleep Deprivation Is Associated with Poor Sperm Quality
and Quantity.
Humanity is in the middle of a sleep crisis. Over the past
few decades, people are getting less and less sleep. But here’s a fact you may
not know: During that same time, men’s sperm count (at least in Western
countries) has also been on a steady decline.
In a recent study published in Fertility and Sterility,
researchers tracked nearly 700 heterosexual couples who were trying to get
pregnant including recording the men’s sleeping patterns. They found that men
who got fewer than 6 hours of sleep a night were 31% less likely to impregnate
their partner by the end of the study, compared to men who got eight hours.
This study didn’t actually measure sperm health, so we can’t
say for sure that impaired sperm quality or quantity was the reason
sleep-deprived men were less likely to impregnate a partner. But a study
conducted in Denmark did. That study examined the sleep habits of nearly 1,000
men in their late teens and early twenties—and also measured their sperm
health. Here’s what they found:
Men with the poorest quality sleep had a 29% reduction in
sperm compared to those with the highest quality sleep.
Men with the poorest quality sleep had a 1.6% reduction in
normal, genetically healthy sperm, meaning they had a higher prevalence of
deformed and immobile sperm, compared to those with the highest quality sleep.
2. Sleep Deprivation Is Associated with Smaller Testicles
Maybe you’re a man who’s not currently interested in having
children, so you think you can get by with skimping on sleep. Here’s another
interesting result to come out of the Denmark study: Men with the poorest
quality sleep had testes that were significantly smaller than men with the
highest quality sleep. So, the next time you hear some guy brag about getting
by on a few hours of sleep, think about that little factoid.
3. Sleep Deprivation Reduces Testosterone
So far, these studies have been correlational—and you
probably know that “correlation does not equal causation.” This means that we
can’t say for sure if lack of sleep causes a reduction in sperm health and
testicle size (although the studies strongly suggest they do). If we really
want to get at causality, we'd need to conduct an experiment on sleep and male
fertility. Lucky for us, someone already did that. Researchers from the
University of Chicago took a group of young, healthy men and forced them to
only get five hours of sleep for a week. During the duration of the study,
researchers regularly tested these men’s testosterone levels. In the end, these
sleep-deprived men showed a 10% reduction in testosterone.
You may be thinking that 10% doesn’t sound like a big drop.
It is. A 10% decrease means these men had testosterone levels equivalent to men
10 years their senior. So, in terms of virility, sleep deprivation aged these
young men by a decade.
Why does sleep impact testosterone in this way? The answer
is that the majority of a man’s testosterone is released while he is asleep. So
less sleep means less time for the body to release this vital chemical. And
testosterone plays a vital role not only in fertility, but in men’s health more
generally. It boosts a man’s energy, sex drive, mood, bone density, physical
energy, and muscle mass.
Very much informative,
ReplyDeleteappreciate,
Very Nice Respected Sir
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