When it comes to sperm egg fusion, it can be said that at a time of great numbers, only one high-quality sperm can break through the barrier and meet the egg. If the quality is all that poor, how can you get pregnant?
About Semen
A normal male ejaculates 2-6ml per ejaculation, which is grayish white or light yellow in color. When ejaculated, it is a sticky liquid in the form of a gel. Semen is composed of seminal plasma and sperm, and the total volume of sperm is less than 10% in semen.
At the beginning, it is the function of seminal plasma to form a gel, with the aim of preventing semen from flowing out of the vagina too quickly. After 5-20 minutes, semen begins to liquefy, allowing sperm to quickly pass through the cervix, enter the uterine cavity, and search for eggs.
The number of sperm per milliliter ranges from 20 to 60 million, and they are classified into four levels.
Level A: Excellent mobility, moving forward in a fast straight line
Level B: Sperm activity is still good, moving forward slowly or sluggishly
Level C: Sperm activity is average and can only move forward in curves
Level D: Extremely poor mobility, unable to move
Under normal circumstances, A-grade sperm is greater than or equal to 25%, or the sum of A-grade and B-grade sperm is greater than or equal to 50%.
If the semen is less than 1.5ml; No liquefaction or incomplete liquefaction within 30 minutes after detachment; C and D grade sperm>40%; Sperm count below 60 million/ml may lead to infertility. For example:
Low sperm count (oligozoospermia)
Low sperm motility (asthenospermia)
Abnormal sperm morphology (dysspermia)
Other semen abnormalities
These can be determined through semen analysis.
Tips
Semen analysis is a roughly normal semen standard obtained by analyzing male semen and used to analyze whether infertile males can meet this standard. In clinical practice, semen analysis is only used to analyze whether a man has basic fertilization ability, and cannot determine the quality of the fetus after the spouse becomes pregnant.
Many people in reality believe that fertilization with malformed sperm and sperm with poor motility can lead to offspring deformities and abnormalities. This viewpoint is incorrect because sperm fertilization follows the principle of survival of the fittest, and inactive and deformed sperm have no fertilization ability at all.
About Pregnancy
So if there are really few sperm, weak sperm, and high deformity rates, then you can't get pregnant? The answer is not so absolute, everyone must not lose confidence. With the guidance of a doctor, there are some coping methods, active treatment, or pregnancy as a father.
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Reproductive system infection: can conceive
Diseases such as orchitis, vasculitis, prostatitis, and seminal vesiculitis can affect semen quality and lead to difficulty in pregnancy or infertility. The infertility caused by this condition can be reproduced after standardized anti-inflammatory treatment. Be sure to take medication in a standardized manner under the guidance of a doctor.
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Varicocele: Can Be Pregnant
According to analysis, the incidence of varicocele in the normal male population is about 10%, while in the infertile population, the incidence can reach about 40%. It may cause testicular lesions, and also increase testicular temperature, which will eventually lead to spermatogenesis disorder and insufficient sperm motility.