SMOKING AND IMPOTENCE; SMOKING AND
INFERTILITY
Smoking and impotence in men have now been conclusively
found to be linked, as have smoking and infertility. Male
impotence, or penile erectile dysfuntion, is the repeated
inability to have or maintain an erection.
Sexual functioning needs the coordination of several systems
in the body. The nervous system works in coordination with
hormones, and the vascular system which supplies blood to the
erectile tissue of the penis. Smoking can affect all these
systems, which in turn, may result in male impotence.
Long-term smoking leads to a greater risk of male impotence.
In a US smoking and impotence study, healthy men who
smoked and had no history of impotence, heart disease or
diabetes, were interviewed twice over an 8 year period. The
second interview in this study revealed that these men were
twice as likely to experience moderate or severe impotence.
A secondary study confirmed that smoking is an independent
risk factor contributing to male impotence. After considering
other risk factors, it was found that current smokers were
twice as likely to experience male impotence as
non-smokers.
Another study grouped impotent smokers according to how many
cigarettes they smoked each day. Heavy smokers, of 40+
cigarettes a day, were found to have the softest night-time
erections. It was concluded that smoking was related to an
abnormal decline of blood pressure in the penis. A direct link
between smoking and impotence.
Smoking and Impotence: Damage and
Recovery
Smoking leads to artery damage where plaques form on their
inner lining, slowing the flow of blood to the penis.
Additionally, nicotine causes the constriction of blood
vessels. This means that blood supply to the penis will be
further compromised in a man who smokes; another definite
connection between smoking and impotence.
Full or partial recovery of erectile function is possible by
quitting smoking. Men who lose their erections before orgasm
have completely reversed this situation by quitting smoking.
This recovery is subject to the amount of damage inflicted on
the body by smoking.
Smoking and Infertility
Smoking affects male fertility by reducing sperm density and
motility compared with that of non-smokers, increasing the risk
of male infertility.
One study found that sperm damaged by smoking may also
result in more couples having baby girls than boys, suggesting
that sperm cells carrying the Y chromosome are more vulnerable
to cigarette smoke toxins, thus reinforcing the link between
smoking and infertility in men.
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