Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5561659 | Reproductive Toxicology | 2017 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
There is increasing concern that use of mobile phones, a source of low-level radio-frequency electromagnetic fields, may be associated with poor semen quality, but the epidemiologic evidence is limited and conflicting. The relationship between mobile phone use patterns and markers of semen quality was explored in a longitudinal cohort study of 153 men that attended an academic fertility clinic in Boston, Massachusetts. Information on mobile phone use duration, headset or earpiece use, and the body location in which the mobile phone was carried was ascertained via nurse-administered questionnaire. Semen samples (n = 350) were collected and analyzed onsite. To account for multiple semen samples per man, linear mixed models with random intercepts were used to investigate the association between mobile phone use and semen parameters. Overall, there was no evidence for a relationship between mobile phone use and semen quality.
Keywords
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Authors
Ryan C. Lewis, Lidia MÃnguez-Alarcón, John D. Meeker, Paige L. Williams, Gabor Mezei, Jennifer B. Ford, Russ Hauser, EARTH Study Team EARTH Study Team,