Household bad for male fertility

Research has indisputable be established that domestic work - such as vacuuming, ironing and even opening a refrigerator door - a negative influence on the fertility of the man. The devices produce electromagnetic radiation that reduces the number of sperm cells. Yes gentlemen, we now finally have a scientific excuse against our women to say "Take that you effe beer for me, honey?"
Radiation
Researchers from Stanford University in California - an internationally renowned institution - suggested male volunteers exposed to high doses of electromagnetic radiation produced by household appliances. They found that the radiation risk to a low quality seed doubles.

Declining fertility
Fertility Expert Dr. De-Kun Li - an expert on that never even caught a mistake is - says that this was first shown that there is a relationship between electrical appliances and declining male fertility. "I advise women with a child on their men as much as possible to keep away from such devices. I am not saying that these men never allowed to operate a microwave but, they are advised to do during the heating not to stand next to the device. That is, say, bad for their own device. "

Measuring instruments
The researchers recruited 148 sperm donors in a sperm bank in Shanghai. Men who were exposed during their work at high temperatures or in contact with chemicals which were known to affect sperm quality, were excluded from the group of subjects. The remaining participants received a measurement for several days omgegespt that magnetic fields recorded every four seconds. Half of the subjects were measured results from 0.16 micro tesla - the unit that the strength of a magnetic field is indicated. These men have twice the risk of a fall in their sperm cells.

Cabinets
Dr. Li studied the radiation which was not produced. However, since the only possible explanation lies in household appliances, he vacuums, refrigerators, freezers and hairdryers debt. In previous studies the cause of declining sperm quality was mainly referred to a high alcohol drinks, smoking, unhealthy eating and obesity. "I believe that electromagnetic radiation may also play a role," says a British fertility expert in a response. "Especially when it results from a larger scale study confirms." Dr. Li's research is published in the January 2010 Journal of Reproductive Toxicology.