I saw this on a finnish news paper's site:
One previous study of man's long life may be predicted nine factors. The study found that men were living in a long time, if they were not obese, blood pressure, blood sugar and bad cholesterol were not elevated, they did not use very little alcohol, they do not smoke out of their compression strength was good, the training was good, or they were married. It is now also found a new ennusmerkki, sperm.
News agency Reuters uutisoiman study, a long life expectancy can be expected also from men whose sperm is healthy. In Denmark, a study was monitored for more than 40 000 men nearly 40 years.
- No matter how you look, the death risk is reduced if siittiöidesi quality is good, Tina Kold Jensen said Reuter Sille.
This does not mean that huonospermaisten men should be on some level for concern, but according to researchers who may be the reason to go tarkastuttamassa health, at least for testicular cancer should be limited to off.
According to researchers, male infertility has increased in recent decades, which some scientists believe is due to the fact that men's reproductive organs do not develop normal uterus. This fact is linked to other diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and diabetes, Reuters says. Thus, the researchers wanted to explore whether the semen quality have contacted diseases and deaths.
And that's what it was that the better sperm, the longer the life. Men who had 40 million sperm per milliliter, were 40 percent lower risk of dying during follow-up compared to men, whose siittiöpitoisuus was below 10 million per milliliter.
Men's life expectancy also increased the mobility of sperm and normal sperm with. For example, if a man's sperm 75 percent or more of the so-called normal sperm, the death risk is more than 50 per cent less than men, which spermassa less than a quarter of normal sperm.
Survival time was increased, the researchers also if he had children. Childless are known to be weaker health and they are more likely to be a chronic illness.
The study was published in American Journal of Epidemiology, Journal of the July issue.
PS: Used Google Translator lol >.>
mb i fail'd on that: