For the vast majority of men suffering from male infertility, how to treat diseases is the most concerned issue. When it comes to treating infertility, there are many methods, but there are also many pitfalls. What are the pitfalls for treating infertility?
Trap 1: Pregnancy within a few months
Pregnancy generally takes from six months to one year, and it is not realistic if you want to get pregnant quickly within two to three months. Being too impatient can actually affect the body, such as menstrual disorders in women, and is not conducive to treatment.
Trap 2: Significant improvement in sperm viability in the short term
Sperm usually takes 75-90 days to mature from spermatogenic cells, so treatment for male infertility and asthenospermia takes 2-3 months to take effect. If the sperm viability increases significantly in the short term during treatment, everyone should instead pay attention to the correctness of the examination.
Trap 3: semen test continues to improve
Semen fluctuates to varying degrees with changes in life and constitution. If semen testing continues to improve significantly during treatment, this is not in line with medical common sense.
Trap 4: Repeated semen examination
Sperm development is slow and the course of treatment is long. From a medical point of view, it is not recommended to repeatedly examine semen during the treatment process, generally once a month to six weeks.
Trap 5: Single medication
Some couples have no abnormalities in both examinations, but long-term infertility. In this case, patients should not blindly take medication. It is best to conduct further in-depth examination, clarify their thoughts, find out the relevant reasons, and prevent blindly taking medication to damage the body, which can worsen infertility.
Male infertility is a headache for many men, which not only makes them lose face, but also makes them unable to hold their heads up in front of their loved ones, family, and friends. We need to choose the right method to treat male infertility, not blindly, and stay away from the trap of treating infertility to solve the problem of male infertility.