Soja y esterilidad masculina
Demasiada soja en la dieta puede ser nefasta para los espermatozoides. El Dr. Jorge Chavarro de la Universidad de Harvard ha publicado un artículo interesante sobre los efectos de este vegetal asiático sobre las característics de los espermatozoides.
Los autores controlaron los hábitos alimenticios de 99 varones durante 6 años. Los varones que consumen derivados de la soja cada dos días tendrían dos veces menos espermatozoides que los que consumían menos soja. Así, los mayores consumidores de soja tenían 41 millones por mililitro menos que los menos consumidores del vegetal. Esa diferencia representa una diferencia de 33 a 50%.
Posiblemente la causa del problema son los efectos estrogénicos de la soja, las llamadas isoflavonas. Además, las personas obesas son más susceptibles a padecer el problema, ya que para ellos la grasa contribuiría a transformar las hormonas masculinas en femeninas.
Chavarro JE, Toth TL, Sadio SM, Hauser R. Soy food and isoflavone intake in relation to semen quality parameters among men from an infertility clinic.Hum Reprod. 2008 Jul 23. [Epub ahead of print]
Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, 665 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA, USA.
BACKGROUND High isoflavone intake has been related to decreased fertility in animal studies, but data in humans are scarce. Thus, we examined the association of soy foods and isoflavones intake with semen quality parameters. METHODS The intake of 15 soy-based foods in the previous 3 months was assessed for 99 male partners of subfertile couples who presented for semen analyses to the Massachusetts General Hospital Fertility Center. Linear and quantile regression were used to determine the association of soy foods and isoflavones intake with semen quality parameters while adjusting for personal characteristics. RESULTS There was an inverse association between soy food intake and sperm concentration that remained significant after accounting for age, abstinence time, body mass index, caffeine and alcohol intake and smoking. In the multivariate-adjusted analyses, men in the highest category of soy food intake had 41 million sperm/ml less than men who did not consume soy foods (95% confidence interval = -74, -8; P, trend = 0.02). Results for individual soy isoflavones were similar to the results for soy foods and were strongest for glycitein, but did not reach statistical significance. The inverse relation between soy food intake and sperm concentration was more pronounced in the high end of the distribution (90th and 75th percentile) and among overweight or obese men. Soy food and soy isoflavone intake were unrelated to sperm motility, sperm morphology or ejaculate volume. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that higher intake of soy foods and soy isoflavones is associated with lower sperm concentration.
La salud de la mujer / Woman's Health

Kika Gómez dijo
Interesante artículo. Gracias por compartirlo. Un abrazo
28 Julio 2008 | 05:10 PM