Health: Does cycling make you infertile?

Long hours in the saddle won’t ruin your sex life, despite the press’s recent claims to the contrary (Paul Smith)
‘Long-distance cycling may seriously damage fertility,’ said The Scotsman. ‘Fertility goes downhill for endurance cyclists,’ reported the Press Association. ‘Cycling saddles men with dodgy sperm,’ decried The Sun.
In time for the start of the 2009 Tour de France, the health editors of the British press warned once again that mankind was cycling towards a childless oblivion.
These latest stories were based upon research presented to the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology, carried out by Professor Diana Vaamonde at the University of Cordoba Medical School, Spain.
However, this study isn’t the first to look into the issue of how the saddle affects our sperm. Back in 1997, Dr Irwin Goldstein, an impotence specialist at Boston University, released data suggesting that saddle-soreness was pretty much a precursor to infertility. Since then, the reporting of such studies has followed a well-worn path.
And so, once again, cyclists have been warned that time in the saddle could reduce their sperm count, even though the results of the Cordoba study came not specifically from cyclists, but from 15 elite male triathletes.
Admittedly, triathletes do a lot of cycling, but in the case of this small, very elite sample, they’d been training nine times a week for at least eight years. Crucially, it’s this volume and intensity of exercise that the study’s data suggests could be the major cause of misshapen sperm – not simply cycling too much.
“Not only was the sample group not made up solely of cyclists, but when the story was reported, the links to Lycra and the temperature of the testicles were brought up once again,” says Dr Allan Pacey, a senior lecturer in andrology at the University of Sheffield. “And yet there remains no solid scientific data to suggest that cycling in close-fitting garments is a cause of infertility in men.”
Iron men?
In the study, the triathletes tested were found to have less than 10 percent of normal looking sperm (most fertile men have around 15-20 percent). Then Vaamonde’s team broke down the athletes' training schedules and looked at the sperm of those who cycled over 300km a week, discovering a further drop to four percent.
Yet Vaamonde’s study wasn’t able to find a reason for this. Instead, the report speculated that it could be due to irritation and compression caused by friction of the testes against the saddle, or tight clothing, which raises the temperature around the testes.
However, she also maintained that reactive oxygen species – small molecules that are a natural byproduct of very high-end exertions – could play a significant part. These molecules react to the ‘stress’ the body undergoes during endurance sports in a way that can damage cell structures and alter the shape of sperm.
Dr Pacey insists that cyclists need not be alarmed by these results, maintaining that the link between cycling and infertility should be treated with caution. “In the ’20s, ’30s and ’40s through to the ’60s, cycling was much more common,” says Pacey, “and yet the real concerns over the fall in fertility among men have only come about in the last couple of decades.”
Instead, he suggests that a combination of factors may be to blame: “The fact that these particular athletes are pushing themselves to physical extremes may have a lot more influence on their sperm count than cycling does. When the body is under extreme duress – when you’re seriously ill, say – such ‘luxuries’ as sperm production get shut down by the body as blood and oxygen are focused on the key survival organs.”
So, does that mean that all but the ultra cyclists, those clocking up over 300km a week, are in the clear?
The shock factor
No, not quite. Pacey adds a caveat to his findings, citing a study from 1999 by Ferdinand Frauscher, from the department of uroradiology at University Hospital, Innsbruck. Frauscher discovered, through scrotal ultrasounds, that up to 96 percent of heavy-duty mountain bikers – those in the saddle for 12 hours a week or more – showed irregularities including swelling, cysts and even benign tumours.
According to Dr David Ralph, a consultant urogenital surgeon at the London Clinic, the trauma experienced by many rough terrain cyclists’ nether regions should be a matter for concern for us all. “Mountain biking can shock the testicles and even compress some of the nerves, leading to cysts and twisted veins," he says. "While this shouldn’t directly link to fertility problems, cyclists should take action to avoid increasing the trauma.”
Dr Ralph advocates the use of saddles with anatomically designed cutouts in them and insists that cyclists should avoid slamming on the brakes. “Without doubt,” he said, “the chief cause of infertility and erectile dysfunctional problems in men these days stems from a lack of exercise and failure to engage in the kind of cardiovascular training that cycling certainly provides.”
So for the sake of your sperm, carry on cycling.
I'm too sexy for my saddle
Dr Ralph is not the only expert to recommend cycling as a way to improve sexual function. Researchers from the Lancisi Heart Institute in Ancona, Italy, found that cycling helped counter the erection-hindering side effects of medication on male heart patients.
Meanwhile, the University of California found that men who engaged in regular cardiovascular-based exercise programmes recorded a 30 percent rise in the frequency of sex with their partners.
It seems that saddle choice has a large role to play. US policemen who switched to no-nose cycle saddles recorded ‘significant’ improvements in erectile function, according to research from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health in Cincinnati.
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User Comments
There are 18 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 18 of 18 comments
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caracolito
Posted Mon 12 Oct, 4:15 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Infertile?!
4 boys since I've started cycling.
I guess I need to cycle even more :-)
A'z
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beckcd
Posted Mon 12 Oct, 6:37 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
I trained, raced and time trialled from 21. I'm now 43. I never wanted kids, couldn't stand the wee things. Virus with shoes as Bill Hicks called them. So when wifey said she was preggers last christmas I realised that relying on cycling to make me infertile was a non starter.
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cullen_bay
Posted Mon 12 Oct, 7:10 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
"those [mountain bikers] in the saddle for 12 hours a week or more – showed irregularities including swelling"
i knew it, mountain biking makes your balls bigger!
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BOYDIE
Posted Mon 12 Oct, 7:35 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Same here,cycled for almost 15 years,one wee girl and hopefully an other on the way,thats if we time it right............
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pcanh
Posted Mon 12 Oct, 9:11 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
when i started cycling again 4 years ago my cock was numb, and i could not get a hard on for weeks, wife was not amused!! i changed my saddle loads of times, thank god i am ok now i use a full gel saddle now, i think i was crushing the main nerve under my groin. so yeah i can see whee there coming from or not is the case!!!
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Noclue
Posted Mon 12 Oct, 9:55 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Wish it would make me infertile, then i wouldn't have to go for the snip soon!!
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pastey_boy
Posted Tue 13 Oct, 7:11 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
its a well known fact that roadies fire blanks. mountain bikers on the other hand make up for our lycra clad cousins
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bobbyfett
Posted Tue 13 Oct, 7:49 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
I'm ok, i check on a nightly basis.......!!
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simonaspinall
Posted Tue 13 Oct, 9:45 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
caracolito
After 2 you should've just bought a tv! ;-)
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neilo23
Posted Tue 13 Oct, 2:10 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Dozens of pros have children. And cycling didn't stop me from having my "little accident". And doing lots of sport and being generally healthy makes your sperm healthy.
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Green Giant
Posted Tue 13 Oct, 9:03 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
I sometimes suspect that these 'scientific' studies have to come up with something shocking to get the media attention that they crave for. Once you start investigating them you always find something wrong with their methodology and if the methodology is wrong then the research is not scientific at all.
Or else it is the media that tries to create shocking news by using bits of scientific research and taking them out of context.
I find cycling very helpful for my health including my sex life. And I got two kids so everything works as it should. I think alcohol, drugs and stress do more damage to your willy and its side kicks than cycling.
Anyway we shouldn't wory about human reproduction; there are already 5 Billion humans. Who needs more??
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greasygrinder
Posted Thu 15 Oct, 7:22 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
I've been riding with a noseless saddle on my commuter for a couple of months. The usual reaction from other cyclists is "God that's ugly". My thinking is I'd rather have a deformed saddle than deformed nads.
I got mine here www.ecdsports.com
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unCivilServant
Posted Thu 15 Oct, 12:41 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Male cyclists have it relatively easy on the scare stories front: until well into the 20th century it was commonly believed that cycling would turn a woman lesbian, or nymphomaniac, or infertile--or all 3!
There are still the occasional 'shock horror' news stories along the lines that if you're female and do anything more intense than the occasional 'fun run' all the hormones will drain from your body and/or you're manifesting anorexia. OK, rant aside, what this article seems to come to is that extremely intense training may have health effects that aren't immediately noticeable. (The comment about cycling being common up to the '60s is a red herring--confuses intensity with how many people practised it.) There's a sensible 'zone' between total immobility and running yourself ragged--well, who'd'a thought it?
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froggo
Posted Fri 16 Oct, 5:34 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
Hey greasygrinder
How's the ride with a noseless saddle? Take much getting used to? Do you tend to slip around a lot, feel less stable?
I'm thinking of getting one for my 14yr old son - severe pain in the perineal area even though his gel seat is level, tried different seat heights.
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JoeyBob
Posted Tue 20 Oct, 2:25 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
I find it a waste it dosnt take anyone much time to realise that to much of anything can have side effects e.g. eating all the pies will eventually make you fat...
I would rather any day be out on my bike getting the fresh air in my lungs at the weekend than drinking or smoking my life away and suffering from stress which would indefinatly lead to a lower sperm count. However the fact I go away for the weekend cheers me up makes me build good muscles and improves stammina lowers stress and makes me miss my belovid Girlfriend who also misses me. It seems like someone is trying to find a scapegoat to get out of cycling but then again everyone of us is different.
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konaboy2275
Posted Wed 21 Oct, 10:14 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
How about one of these
http://sheldonbrown.com/real-man.html
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Monsieur La Papadici
Posted Thu 22 Oct, 11:00 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
"How does this affect your sperm?"
My Mrs says it still tastes the same, a little more bannannary, but essentially the same.
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pauldowner
Posted Fri 23 Oct, 11:54 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
haha ive only just started to do longish distances on my bike glad to hear that scientest think i wont be able to have kids what do they no with there labs coats and microcopes they just see equation and figures haha just another new headline meaning nothing :)
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