Smoking too much pot doesn’t just chill men out, it can cause their sperm to become “more mellow and swimming in circles.”
Just a couple of joints a week could be enough to lower sperm counts
by almost a third, even when accounting for other lifestyle factors,
recent research shows.
“The weight of the evidence is that marijuana does affect sperm
counts,” said Dr. Victor Chow, a clinical associate professor at the
University of British Columbia Medical School’s department of urological
sciences.
While the occasional puff likely won’t cause too much harm, among
“heavy users it will definitely affect the quality of the sperm,” he
said.
Dr. Chow said some studies focus on lowered sperm counts, but
marijuana also appears to affect sperm’s motility, or how it moves, and
makes it “more mellow and swimming in circles.”
The weight of the evidence is that mar is probably a negative impact not only for sperm counts but sperm function
After a slew of headlines this summer about the decline in sperm
counts and Western fertility, there has been much handwringing over
lifestyle factors. And, with marijuana legalization pending in Canada,
experts say it’s worth having a discussion about some of the side
effects of heavier pot use.
“The weight of the evidence is that marijuana probably has a negative
impact not only for sperm counts but sperm function,” Dr. Chow said.
The effect on male fertility is strong because “sperm is a very
rapidly turning over cell,” he said. That means heavy marijuana use can
have an immediate effect on sperm production because the male body makes
new sperm about every three months.
Dr. Chow also noted that women who are trying to become pregnant
shouldn’t use marijuana, just as they shouldn’t use other drugs.
Dr. Armand Zini, an associate professor of urology at McGill
University who researches male infertility, said he would advise heavy
marijuana users who are having trouble conceiving to cut back, given the
growing breadth of evidence about the direct effect of pot use on sperm
counts and quality. But he also cautioned we need more clinical studies
to fully understand the effects.
“The science of it is not very strong, I have to say, because we
don’t have that many clinical or experimental studies,” Dr. Zini said,
adding that most are animal studies, although there have been several
convincing ones involving humans. “Even though we may not have the
strongest data on this, there’s some evidence to support what I am
saying.”
Both doctors pointed to a massive 2015 study
out of Denmark, where over 1,200 young men participated. It found:
“Regular marijuana smoking more than once per week was associated with a
28-per-cent … lower sperm concentration and a 29-per-cent … lower total
sperm count after adjustment for confounders (other factors like
weight, smoking and time between the sample given and last
ejaculation).”
While those researchers cautioned further research is required, the
Danish team also noted, “Our findings are of public interest as
marijuana use is common and may be contributing to recent reports of
poor semen quality,” and cited the growing number of countries that are
legalizing marijuana.
All this runs counter to what pot activists often like to frame as
false “Reefer Madness”-style information about marijuana. In August,
Jodie Emery, one of the owners of Cannabis Culture and a marijuana
advocate, wondered on Twitter if it’s not time Health Canada removed
lowered sperm count from its list of side effects.
Turns out, for even moderate users — the Denmark study found that
people who used pot more than one a week were affected — cutting back on
the ganja may be a good move if they’re trying to conceive.
And while many past studies have focused on THC — the main chemical
in pot that gets you high — the effects of the complex cannabinoids
contained in the drug also need to be considered.
Those complex drugs could actually hold some good news for men struggling with infertility. A 2016 study
in the British Journal of Pharmacology found that a specific
cannabinoid receptor could help trigger sperm production, and indicated
that understanding how to do so could lead to a treatment for
infertility.
The flip side, of course, is that triggering that receptor could also
hinder production or quality if done irregularly or in a way that
depresses instead of stimulates sperm count, so those researchers also
cautioned not to take their study as a sign that pot is good for sperm
production, but as another sign it definitely affects it, for better or
worse.
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