The brawny Rasul Baksh*, 24, in his washed out shalwar kameez, is an unlikely sight at an infertility clinic.
And yet, here he is, at the small and neat Sindh Institute of Reproductive Health, in Karachi’s Malir area. With no qualms, he has come to collect his semen analysis report.
Rasul is accompanied by wife, his companion in a two-year-long childless marriage. After multiple visits to doctors and quacks offering pricey ‘miracle’ pills, he is finally at the five-year-old centre established by renowned gynaecologist Dr Shershah Syed and his sister Dr Shahnaz Zafar.
As one of the many men in Pakistan – a growing number – classified as ‘sub-fertile’, Rasul wants answers. He wants solutions.
It takes two
According to Dr Lubna Durrani, a gynaecologist and infertility specialist at the centre, around 10 to 15 per cent of the male population is sub-fertile. Jarringly, the number of cases where men alone are responsible for childlessness has gone up to 30 per cent.
“There is more awareness about infertility and the treatment options among men now,” says Dr Durrani. “Before, it was all blamed on women. But today, male egos have also gone down. We get couples from as far as Iran and Afghanistan for treatment.”
Why the increase?
At the Lahore Institute of Fertility and Endocrinology, andrologist Dr Gulfam Ahmad Baryar, sketches an even more jarring picture. He contends that in his latest unpublished study on 1,700 patients, 39 per cent men were found to be infertile – a staggering increase from the worldwide rate of 20 to 30 per cent.
According to Baryar, global warming and increased environmental pollution is compromising the quality and production of sperm in men.
“The testes function optimally at a temperature of 34.5 degrees Celsius,” he says. Sedentary professions such as driving, tailoring or sitting in front of computers for long hours, are also responsible for the high male factor infertility. Heat-intensive work, including cooking or placing laptops on one’s laps, using endocrine-disrupting chemicals such as drugs, smoking, pan, gutka and alcohol, and the non-treatment of urinary tract or reproductive system infections, are all contributing to the high male factor.
“Mental stress arising out of social and economic issues is also leading to diminished male sexual desire and affecting fertility,” he explains. “Furthermore, infertility is hereditary, too.’
If anything positive can be taken away from the high numbers, it is that more cases are now being documented, indicating that men, even from remote areas, are increasingly heading for infertility treatments.
Of options
Earning just over Rs20,000 from his job at a cattle farm in Bhains Colony, Rasul doesn’t yet seem concerned about the expensive infertility treatment he may be recommended. Even more astonishingly, he is not uptight about his test results, either. He was told at the collection desk that his sperm count was low and slow, but he knows he has options.
If the patient does not indicate any major reproductive malfunction, he is usually prescribed a combination of multivitamins and anti-oxidants, such as zinc, vitamin E, Arginine, L-carnitine, coenzyme Q10 that kill toxins accumulated in his body responsible for compromised sperm quality and quantity. Medicines to cure urinary tract or reproductive system infections can also be administered.
If sperm count is mildly inadequate, a process called Intra-uterine Insemination is used. Costing approximately Rs15,000 to Rs20,000, this procedure involves taking a sample of semen, collecting and preparing good-quality sperms and inserting them directly in the female’s uterus using a catheter.
However, if the sperm analysis indicates moderate to severe problems, Intra-Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection, costing Rs250,000 to Rs300,000 is recommended. A sperm is directly injected into the extracted female egg using a needle and, once fertilised, the embryo is placed inside the woman’s uterus using an ultrasound-guided catheter.
Patients, however, should bear in mind that the success rate of Assisted Reproductive Treatments is 30 to 35 per cent.
*Name has been changed to protect confidentiality
Published in The Express Tribune, July 22nd, 2013.
COMMENTS (14)
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Ok if this is the infertility rate in Pakistan then why Pakistani Population is increasing at one of the fastest rate in the world. why the infertility don't effect it??
LOL at the pic of "Banjar Zameen" =D
don't take me wrong. I may be not orrect. But this is a question that some times vexes me. Is it the case worldwide or only in Pakistan. Do men in other countries have the same infertility rate? Apart from that is it in the muslims world or other countries, too. I may me wrong, correct me if i am, but isn't it the cause of some kind of vaccine given to childern that cause the promlem at adult age.
Simple fact is that overall health has gone down. Age limit is going down day by day. Obviously it effects reproductive health as well. Lifestyles, eating habbits, intake of preservatives and artificial floavors all have added up to worsening health conditions. No wonder pakistani men are lesser fertile than men around the world.
AHAHh well no offense but i ind it an advertisement for that very clinic and doctors....seriously is this what we are worried about now ??? as now on our national television we see condom adds and here we complain ?? how ironic..............! and i think every person is getting married every women is getting pregnant (generally speaking, though i know there are a lot of people who have issues) but the speed of population growth does not allow me to even think that we are getting infertile or whatever you may call it... the only lacking i feel in our young generation is that we do not have physical activities,no walk no sports nothing...just latest touch mobile and Face-booking for hours.....ridiculously long hours sitting in-front of digital screens,even compromising food,sleep we just need to be refreshed...we need to be shaken....and all is well... :) we have bad rather nasty junk food patterns even at our homes,those need to be changed....as it has been aid "you are what you eat" so eat fresh,think fresh have good healthy activities all would be fine ;)
dont give me medical crap tha how it happens, just tell me why ?fast food? bad health , ill activites ?
@someone
Author has made it clear that the scope of this article is men infertility not both men and women. So I don't think she is misguiding. Actually you confirmed her stats by saying 40% is due to men. Besides in statistics like these there is no ultimate truth they are studies and will give us an idea of the situation if the sampling is done right.
@Mobeen
Author has mentioned that the study is 'unpublished' and the statistics mentioned by @someone are even more dramatic (and correct in my opinion) so where is she exaggerating?
Even if it is for the publicity of clinic it is still a good job by bringing a very touchy and extreamely important for those who are going through it ..... sometimes quietly.
I have always doubts and reservations about the information that is passed by express blogs. This is exaggeration and manipulation of reality as my friend highlighted above. I assert that this blog is just for the sake of publicity for the newly established clinic rather than for the information.There is no any authentic reference for the figures he has claimed above, about the infertility except UNPUBLISHED STUDY.
what is the email adress of that doctors who wrote that paragraph...i i ask some questions to them according to this topic?
ahaa children what can u say, cant live with them cant live with out them... adoption, can't it be a solution after a life spent trying to get in the one in billions i guess
Costs are exhorbitantly high , come to east punjab rates are 70 pc less
He contends that in his latest unpublished study on 1,700 patients, 39 per cent men were found to be infertile – a staggering increase from the worldwide rate of 20 to 30 per cent. Dear author you know about 40 percent of the issues involved with infertility are due to the man, another 40 percent due to the woman, and 20 percent result from complications with both partners worldwide, So kindly don't misguide or depress Pakistanis with wrong statistics.
yet, global warming and environmental pollution.
No religion is mentioned. What went wrong?