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News--
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Taking carnitine supplements seems to improve sperm mobility in men with poorly active sperm, a problem known as asthenozoospermia, Italian researchers report.
However, for carnitine to work, tiny structures within the
cell called mitochondria must function properly. Mitochondria
are important because they provide the energy needed for sperm
to move their tail and "swim."
Senior investigator Dr. Carlo Foresta told Reuters Health
that "it is well known that in some asthenozoospermic subjects
an improvement of sperm (motion occurs) after carnitine
administration...However in other asthenozoospermic patients
this effect is not present."
To investigate further, Foresta of the University of Padua
and colleagues studied 30 asthenozoospermic men divided into
two groups depending on whether they had normal or abnormal
mitochondria function. The researchers' findings appear in the
medical journal Fertility & Sterility.
In patients with normal mitochondria function, movement
rose from 29.3 percent before treatment to 41.1 percent after 3
months of carnitine. However, in those with abnormal function,
movement held steady at about 24 percent.
Thus, Foresta concluded that carnitine treatment is useful
"in ameliorating sperm motility only when
optimal...mitochondrial function ... is conserved."
SOURCE: Fertility & Sterility 2005.
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