COVID-19 vaccines do not cause lower sperm counts and could actually increase sperm, study says
Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines do NOT lower sperm counts and could actually increase semen levels, study finds
- Men who received Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccines did not exhibit lower sperm counts, many even had higher sperm counts after vaccination
- Results found that the average man increased sperm by 22% with the largest increase in sperm count at 90%
- Largest decrease in sperm count of any man in the study was only 20%
- Many false claims about the vaccines and their effects of sperm count and fertility have arisen on social media in recent months
COVID-19 vaccines do not reduce the sperm count or quality of men, and may even increase the amount of semen they produce, a new study suggests.
Researchers at the University of Miami studied sperm counts in men who had recently been vaccinated, and compared results to their sperm count before being vaccinated.
They did not find any sperm count reductions for men who had received either one or two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna coronavirus vaccine, and the final mean and median sperm counts even increased.
The team says the findings counter a false narrative that has spread on anti-vaccine social media pages that the COVID-19 vaccines affect fertility.
A waterfall plot showing the changes in sperm count of men after they were vaccinated, compared to tests before vaccination. A majority of men saw increased levels of sperm, and the increases were larger than the decreases
For the study, published in JAMA, the team recruited 45 men aged 18 to 50 years old, all of whom had no previously known case of COVID-19 and did not exhibit symptoms of the virus.
After two to seven days of abstinence, and before receiving their first vaccine dose, a semen analysis was performed on the men.
Their sperm counts were analyzed once again 70 days after they received the second dose of either mRNA vaccine.
The median sperm count increased from 26 million cells per milliliter of fluid (m/ml) to 30 m/ml, a 15 percent increase.
Meanwhile, average sperm counts increased from 36 m/ml to 44 m/ml, a 22 percent increase.
The largest increase in sperm count was of around 90 percent, with the largest decrease being around 20 percent.
Sperm volume and sperm motility also significantly increased.
The increases may not be because of the vaccine, though, as they fall within normal fluctuations of sperm counts.
It is also possible that the few days of abstinence the men undertook before being evaluated for the study may have boosted their sperm counts.
Researchers say there are confident that the data shows that the vaccines do not reduce sperm counts, though.
Conspiracies that the COVID-19 vaccines cause decreased sperm count or infertility in men have spread on social media as part of a flurry of vaccine disinformation
While COVID-19 vaccines may not have much effect on sperm, the virus that causes the disease does.
A German study from earlier this year found that coronavirus caused sperm to become inflamed, less mobile and more likely to show signs of oxidized stress.
The concentration of sperm in men who had COVID was reduced by over 500 percent as well.
Conspiracies that the COVID-19 vaccine causes a decrease in sperm count arose on social media amid a flurry of false claims about side effects of the vaccine.
Along with claims that the vaccines cause lower sperm count in men, and by virtue reduced fertility or flat out infertility, many have also made the false claim that the vaccine causes infertility in women.
Scientists have worked to debunk these claims, but research generally can take long periods of time to perform.
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