Home  |   Archive  |   Online Submission  |   News & Events  |   Subscribe  |   APFA  |   Society  |   Contact Us  |   中文版
Search   
 
Journal

Ahead of print
Authors' Accepted
    Manuscripts
new!
Current Issue
Archive
Acknowledgments
Special Issues
Browse by Category

Manuscript Submission

Online Submission
Online Review
Instruction for Authors
Instruction for Reviewers
English Corner new!

About AJA

About AJA
Editorial Board
Contact Us
News

Resources & Services

Advertisement
Subscription
Email alert
Proceedings
Reprints

Download area

Copyright licence
EndNote style file
Manuscript word template
Guidance for AJA figures
    preparation (in English)

Guidance for AJA figures
    preparation (in Chinese)

Proof-reading for the
    authors

AJA Club (in English)
AJA Club (in Chinese)

 
Abstract

Volume 15, Issue 2 (March 2013) 15, 199–200; 10.1038/aja.2012.153

On environmental threats to male infertility

Allen J Wilcox1 and Jens Peter E Bonde2

1 Epidemiology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Durham, NC 27709-2233, USA
2 Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, University Hospital of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, NV DK-2400, Denmark

Correspondence: Dr AJ Wilcox, (wilcox@niehs.nih.gov)

Received 30 November 2012; Accepted 30 November 2012 Advance online publication 21 January 2013

Abstract

The possibility that environmental pollutants damage human fertility is a topic of both public concern and scientific interest. The effect of environmental factors on male fertility (semen parameters) has been a special focus, stimulated in part by the dramatic damage inflicted by the pesticide DBCP on testicular function. Extensive searches for testicular toxicants (in particular, the proposed effects of endocrine-disrupting compounds through fetal exposure) have produced little hard evidence of impairment in humans. This scarcity of evidence may reflect the difficulties of studying human fertility. Future fertility studies should consider the wide spectrum of environmental exposures that plausibly affect reproduction.

PDF | PDF | 中文摘要 |

 
Browse:  3798
 
Asian Journal of Andrology CN 31-1795/R ISSN 1008-682X  Copyright © 2023  Shanghai Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences.  All rights reserved.