The first study to investigate the relationship between eating fruit and vegetables containing
pesticide1 residues3 and the quality of men's semen has shown a link with lower
sperm4 counts and percentages of normally-formed sperm. The study, which is published online today (Tuesday) in Human Reproduction shows that men who ate the highest amount of fruit and vegetables with high levels of pesticide
residue2 had a 49% lower sperm count and a 32% lower percentage of normally-formed sperm than men who consumed the least amount. An accompanying editorial says the findings have important implications for human health.
However, the study of 155 men showed that, overall, the total amount of fruit and vegetables consumed was unrelated to changes in any measurements of semen quality in the group as a whole.
Assistant Professor of Nutrition and Epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston (USA), Jorge Chavarro, said: "These findings should not discourage the consumption of fruit and vegetables in general. In fact, we found that total
intake5 of fruit and vegetables was completely unrelated to semen quality. This suggests that
implementing6 strategies specifically targeted at avoiding pesticide residues, such as consuming organically-grown produce or avoiding produce known to have large amounts of residues, may be the way to go."
Previous studies have shown that occupational exposure to
pesticides7 might have an effect on semen quality, but so far there has been little
investigation8 of the effects of pesticides in diet.
Prof Chavarro, his student Dr Yu-Han Chiu and colleagues analysed 338 semen samples from 155 men attending a fertility centre between 2007-2012 as part of the
ongoing9,
prospective10 "Environment and Reproductive Health" (EARTH) Study. The men were
eligible11 for the study if they were
aged12 18-55, had not had a vasectomy, and were part of a couple planning to use their own eggs and sperm for fertility treatment.