To conceive a life, the quality of sperm directly affects the quality of pregnancy, and can even directly determine whether a woman can conceive. If a man experiences azoospermia, the ability of a woman to conceive is naturally affected, so it is possible to detect the condition in a timely manner and actively treat it. So, what are the symptoms of azoospermia? What is the reason for this?
Symptoms of azoospermia
Semen morphology and color: Normal semen: Viscous, milky white.
Dead sperm syndrome: It often presents with yellow, translucent, and turbid thin mucus.
The physical signs of azoospermia include loss of kidney essence, deficiency of yin and excessive fire, and burning of kidney essence; Body deficiency, insufficient kidney qi, vegetarian preference for thick taste, accumulation of dampness and heat, fumigation of the essence palace, and impairment of kidney essence; Or mental depression, liver loss and laxity, wood stagnation turning into fire, and kidney essence being affected.
Causes of azoospermia
Cause 1: congenital dysplasia
Congenital dysplasia of male genitalia, such as bilateral cryptorchidism and congenital testicular hypoplasia, can lead to spermatogenesis disorder or abnormal spermatogenesis, resulting in the occurrence of spermatozoa.
Reason 2: Comprehensive factors
Long term malnutrition, smoking, excessive drinking, mental stress, excessive sexual life and serious systemic diseases will affect the production of sperm, and can affect sperm motility, even lead to spermatozoa death.
Reason 3: Reproductive system infection
Due to the infection of pathogenic bacteria in the male reproductive system, inflammation occurs and consumes a large amount of essential nutrients or trace elements such as zinc that sperm rely on for survival. Factors such as changes in the acidity and alkalinity of semen damage the environment for sperm survival and cause sperm death.
Reason 4: High temperature environment
Some men prefer saunas, fumigation, and long-term hot baths, but high temperatures can cause abnormalities in testicular sperm and even kill sperm. The production of sperm requires low environmental temperatures, and frequent high temperature stimulation cannot provide a suitable environment for sperm, which can lead to azoospermia.
Reason 5: Immune factors
When men suffer from acute mumps, antibodies against their own sperm can be produced in the body, leading to the occurrence of male azoospermia.