• Epidemiology · May 2003

    Does smoking during pregnancy affect sons' sperm counts?

    • Lone Storgaard, Jens Peter Bonde, Erik Ernst, Marcello Spanô, Claus Yding Andersen, Morten Frydenberg, and Jørn Olsen.
    • Department of Occupational Medicine, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark. lstor@akh.aaa.dk
    • Epidemiology. 2003 May 1; 14 (3): 278-86.

    BackgroundThere has been an apparent decline in sperm density during the last 5 decades in Denmark, a country in which women have among the highest rates of smoking in Europe. We examined semen quality and sex hormones in men in relation to their mothers' tobacco smoking during pregnancy.MethodsMale participants were selected from the population-based Danish Twin Registry and the Danish Civil Registration System as part of a study on hereditary and environmental determinants of semen quality. From November 1999 to May 2000 we collected one fresh semen and blood sample from each of 316 men. Data on prenatal tobacco exposure were obtained for 265 of these men from a questionnaire filled in by their mothers.ResultsAdjusting for age, current smoking status and other factors, sperm density was 48% lower(95% confidence interval = -69% to -11) among sons of mothers who smoked more than 10 cigarettes per day during pregnancy. Total sperm counts and levels of inhibin-B were also reduced among this group, whereas follicular stimulating hormone levels were somewhat higher (16% increase; 95% confidence interval = -13% to 54%). These effects were not seen in the lower smoking category (1-10 cigarettes per day).ConclusionsHigh levels of smoking (> 10 cigarettes per day) during pregnancy may be a partial explanation for the apparent secular decline and the geographic differences in sperm counts.

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