Title: Male Genital Infection and Infertility
1Male Genital Infection and Infertility
- Du Geon Moon, MD, Ph.D.
- Department of Urology
- Korea University College of Medicine
2Contents
- Text Controversy
- Pyospermia
- Microbiology
- Chlamydia
- Mycoplasmataceae
- Male accessory gland infection Infertility
- Urethritis, Prostatitis, Epididymitis, Orchitis
Male accessory gland infection by the WHO
1993
3EAU Guidelines on Male Infertility
- One of the potentially correctable causes of male
infertility is symptomatic and asymptomatic
infection of the male urogenital tract.
European Urology 48 (2005) 703-711
4Whats on Text?
- Components of the History in the Evaluation of
Infertile Male - Past Medical History
- Urinary infections
- STD
- Viral orchitis
- Epididymitis
- Tuberculosis
- Classification of Male Infertility
- by Criteria of Semen Analysis
- Azoospermia
- Spermatogenic abnormalities
Viral orchitis - Asthenospermia
- Genital tract infection
Campbell-Walsh Urology 9th edition
5Controversy
- Evident infertility
- Male accessory organ destruction
- Seminal tract obstruction
- Lack of evidence for negative influence on sperm
quality - Basic ejaculate analysis does not reveal a link
between accessory gland infection and impaired
sperm characteristics - Antibiotic treatment
- symptomatic relief, eradicates micro-organisms
- no positive effect on inflammatory alterations
- cannot reverse functional deficits and anatomical
dysfunctions - may provide improvement in sperm quality
- not always enhance the probability of conception
Campbell-Walsh Urology 9th edition
6Do you think Male genital infections are related
to Infertility?
7Pyospermia, Infection and Fertility
- POSITIVE
- Infertile couples tend to have greater
concentrations of WBCs than fertile populations
(Wolff Anderson, 1988) - Infection and infertility have been associated
with pyospermia (Caldamone, 1980 Maruyama, 1985) - NEGATIVE
- Presence of bacteria in semen has not always
correlated with the presence of pyospermia
(Rodin, 2003) - Many patients of pyospermia do not have genital
tract infections - Not all studies of patients with increased
leukocytes in the semen report decreased
fertility rates (Tomlinson, 1993)
Campbell-Walsh Urology 9th edition
8Pyospermia
- S/A reports that list numbers or conc. of WBCs
- should be viewed with skepticism
-
- Immature germ cells (spermatocytes) and
leukocytes - appear similar under wet mount microscopy
- known as round cells
- cannot usually be differentiated without special
stain - Increased numbers of round cells
- should list as round cells unless special stains
- true pyospermia 1/3, spermatocytes 2/3(Sigman
Lopes, 1993) - WBC staining of semen
- not generally used during semen analysis
- more than 10 to 15 round cells/HPF or 1 million
round cells/mL
Campbell-Walsh Urology 9th edition
9Management of Pyospermia
- If the majority are WBCs and ? 1 million cells/mL
- considered abnormal
- possible genital tract infection or inflammation
- should be evaluated for a genital tract infection
- Absence of infection
- anti-inflammatory medication
- empirical antibiotic therapy
- frequent ejaculations
- prostatic massage
- Lack of proven efficacy (Yanushpolsky, 1995)
- Semen processing to remove the WBCs
- combined with IUI or IVF
Campbell-Walsh Urology 9th edition
10Microbiology (semen culture)
- Human semen culture
- Many aerobic and anaerobics (Upadhyaya, 1984)
- Mycoplasma (Naessens, 1986)
- Effects of seminal bacteria on fertility
- may be spermicidal (Paulson, 1977)
- no consistent effect on fertility (Berger, 1982)
- Routine genital tract cultures are not indicated
- clinical symptoms (-) or documented pyospermia(-)
- Culture() genital infection with clinical
symptoms - appropriate treatment
Campbell-Walsh Urology 9th edition
11I. Chlamydia trachomatis
- Obligate intracellular bacterium
- One of the most common STD
- Up to 50 of infected may be asymptomatic
- Cause of nongonococcal urethritis epididymitis
- Those with symptom, urethritis is most common
- Can C. trachomatis directly damage sperm?
- The effect on male infertility is unclear and
controversial. - Cultured from semen, prostatic secretions, urine
(Thompson Washington, 1983)
12Past infection in men, in-vivo
- Correlation of serological markers with
infertility status or semen quality - Semen quality is not different from uninfected
controls (Ness RB, 1997) - not seem to affect semen parameters in the
absence of epididymal obstruction - Independent association between infertility and
chlamydial IgG antibodies (Idahl A, 2004)
Lancet Infect Dis 2005553-57
13Ongoing infection in men, in-vivo
- Obvious ethical and technical difficulties
- Unaffected by the bacterium
- Semen quality (Hosseinzadeh S, 2004)
- Key aspects of sperm function (Vigil P, 2002)
- Chlamydia () men
- significant reduction in sperm acrosomal reaction
(Jungwirth A, 2003)
Lancet Infect Dis 2005553-57
14C. trachomatis infection, in-vitro
Most in-vitro studies concentrated on the effect
of the bacterium on sperm function directly
- Bacterial adherence to spermatozoa
- Bacterial hitch hikers (Eley A, 2001)
- Explanation of disease spread
- C. trachomatis elementary bodies
- decline in sperm mortility (Hosseinzadeh S, 2001)
- Premature sperm death
- Attachment of green fluorescent C. trachomatis
elementary bodies to humen sperm
Lancet Infect Dis 2005553-57
15C trachomatis lipopolysaccharide
- Primary cause of spermatozoa death
- premature sperm death (Hosseinzadeh S, 2003)
- same as female genital tract
- Most spermicidal in human beings
- 65 mortality in spermatozoa (0.1ug/mL, 1hr)
- 500 times more active than E. coli
-
Lancet Infect Dis 2005553-57
16Proposed hypothesis on Future research
- CD14
- lipopolysaccharide interacts with cells via
CD14 in seminal plasma on spermatozoa - Reactive oxygen species (ROS)
- decrease sperm mortility
- disrupt sperm function by peroxidation
- Apoptosis
- ROS, act as molecular mediators of apoptosis
Lancet Infect Dis 2005553-57
17II. Mycoplasmataceae
- Include Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma Gram's stain
(-) - Mycoplasma hominis and Ureaplasma urealyticum
- Ass.with nongonococcal urethritis in humans
- U. urealyticum attacks spermatozoa directly
- Attachment on head, midpiece of sperm by EM
(Gnarpe, 1972) - Attachment on sperm decrease sperm quality
(Grossgebauer, 1984) - U. urealyticum
- elevated levels of leukocyte-derived ROS
- ? damage sperm by lipid peroxidation (Potts,
2000)
18Recent Evidence of Mycoplasmataceae
- M. hominis and U. urealyticum in semen culture
() - represents colonization and not infection
- no evidence of inflammatory reactions (Pannekoek,
2000) -
- U. urealyticum
- decrease motility and membrane changes (Nunez,
1998) - no differences in semen parameters between
culture () and (-) (Busolo, 1984 Soffer, 1990
Andrade-Rocha, 2003) - M. genitalium
- clearly pathogenic, a common cause of urethritis
(Jensen, 2004) - Lack of studies regarding the role on male
infertility
19Test for M. genitalium C. trachomatis
- Clinical evidence of inflammatory or infectious
process - Urine culture
- should be in patients with evidence of cystitis
or urethritis - Semen culture
- frequently yield low concentrations of multiple
organisms for distal urethral contamination. - Antibacterial skin preparation and voiding before
ejaculation - decreases the incidence of false () (Kim
Goldstein, 1999) - First-void urine PCR
- higher sensitivity than culture
- less uncomfortable than urethral swabs (Maeda,
2004)
20Urethritis - Impact on infertility
- Sexually acquired urethritis
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae
- Chlamydia trachomatis
- Ureaplasma urealyticum
- Negative influence is under debate
- Past infection with N. gonorrhoeae
- associated with leukocytospermia (Trum, 1998)
- Impair fertility
- Urethral stricture ejaculatory disturbance (WHO
1993) - Urethral obstruction ejaculatory disturbance
(Purvis and Christiansen, 1995)
21Prostatitis is associated with Infertility
- 5-12 of infertile man
- history of past infection (Dohle, 2003)
- 12 of abnormal semen quality
- male genital infection (Everaert, 2003)
- Bacteria itself can produce IL-8
- deleterious effect on fertility (Depuydt, 1996)
- Chlamydia, E. coli
- decrease acrosomal reaction (Kohn, 1998)
22Prostatitis is not associated with Infertility
- Nonbacterial prostatitis/prostatodynia vs normal
control - No difference in density, motility, morphology
(Weidner, 1999) - Nonbacterial prostatitis (Ludwig, 2003)
- leukocytospermia()
- no effect on density, motility, morphology
Krieger et al, 1999, Campbells Urology 9th
edition
23Chronic pelvic pain syndrome affect the acrosomal
reaction in human spermatozoa
- Sperm membrane for normal sperm function
- Genital tract infection, reactive oxygen species
- responsible for damage of sperm via sperm
membrane function - resulting in loss of sperm motility, compromised
fertility
World J Urol (2006) 24 39-44
24Impact of Prostatitis IIIB (Prostatodynia) on
Ejaculate Parameters
- The first age-matched controlled study
European Urology 44 (2003) 546-548
25Summary of Prostatitis
- Fertility and prostatitis relations remain
obscure - Limitations of current studies on semen quality
- exact classification criteria, control groups,
complete spermiogram data - Reduced fructose conc. in prostatitis NIH IIIB
- impaired secretion of the seminal vesicles,
somatic factor - reduction of motility, indirectly linked to
forward sperm motility through prostasome
function - Acrosomal function in chronic prostatitis
- Balance between ROS and antioxidant capacity in
semen plays critical role in the pathophysiology
of genital tract inflammations and their impact
on sperm functions and fertilization
26Epididymitis
- Sexually active men lt35 yrs C. trachomatis or
N. gonorrhoeae - Men gt 35 yrs Gram-negative enteric organism
- Pathophysiology of epididymal duct stenosis,
obstruction - Wall thickening and altered contractility
(Pelliccione, 2004) - replacement of spindle-shaped myoid cells in
normal contractile tubules by large smooth muscle
cells (SMCs) - Increased mechanical forces from the obstruction
activate the differentiation of myoid cells into
SMCs - Reduction of sperm count, eventual azoospermia
- Rare azoospermia after initial 14-day
epididymitis (Weidner, 1990) - Initial antibiotic therapy prevent worse effect
on sperm transportation (Purvis Christiansen,
1995)
27Ejaculate analysis Impact on fertility
- Transient decrease of sperm count and forward
motility
28Tb epididymitis
- Vasal infection in 20-41
- Asymtomatic inflammation of epididymis and vas
deference - eventual epididymal vasal obstruction
- Semen analysis
- decrease semen volume 33
- oligospermia 11
Ko et al. Korea J Urol 1994
29Orchitis - Ejaculate analysis
- Leukocytic exudate inside and outside the
seminiferous tubules resulting in tubular
sclerosis - Acute epididymo-orchitis,
- transient decrease of sperm count and forward
motility (Diemer Desjardins, 1999) - Acute obstructive azoospermia is rare
complication - Chronic inflammation of seminiferous tubules
- disrupt normal spermatogenesis, alterations in
sperm number and quality (Purvis Christiansen,
1995) - spermatogenic arrest (Weidner Krause, 1999)
- testicular atrophy and azoospermia in
mumps-orchitis
30Take Home Messages
- Unlike female sterility, the significance of
genital infections for male infertility is still
debating. - Male accessory glands are reservoirs for
organisms(C. trachomatis and M. genitalium) hence
increase transmission to the partners. - Cautious use of leukospermia or bacteriospermia
as parameters for glandular infection. Instead of
classical parameters, e.g. the determination of
microorganisms and/or counting leukocytes,
functional parameters such as cytokines, ROS or
other indicators of inflammation should be
estimated if available. - Proper antibiotic treatment and empirical
treatment are important for eradicating
microorganism, symptom improvement, prevention of
transmission to others and decrease of potential
complications, e.g. stricture, obstruction or
atrophy.
31Now, do you think Male genital infections are
related to Infertility?
Thank You for Attention !!