Heat-based contraception

An alternative male contraceptive method involves heating the testicles so that they cannot produce sperm. Sperm are best produced at a temperature slightly below body temperature. The muscles around a male's scrotum involuntarily tighten if the man's body temperature drops, and they loosen, allowing the testes to hang, if the body temperature rises. This is the body's way of keeping the sperm at an ideal temperature.[citation needed] This means that sperm production can be disrupted with increased temperature.[1] Some suggest exposure to high temperatures (116 °F equal to 47 °C) can affect fertility for months.[2]

Male thermal contraceptive methods (MTC) derive their effectiveness from the alteration of the thermoregulatory function of the scrotum.[3] When this function is altered – by wearing tight underwear,[4] being exposed to a high outside temperature, or by developing a fever, fertility may be impaired.

Methods used include hot water applied to the scrotum, heat generated by ultrasound, and artificial cryptorchidism (holding the testicles inside the abdomen) using specialized briefs. One of the initial experiments resulted in partial infertility lasting more than four years.[5] Initial experiments suggest it is effective and safe, though there have not been long-term studies to determine if it has any side effects on the body after reversal.

  1. ^ Kandeel, F. R.; Swerdloff R. S. (Jan 1988). "Role of temperature in regulation of spermatogenesis and the use of heating as a method for contraception". Fertil Steril. 49 (1): 1–23. doi:10.1016/S0015-0282(16)59640-X. PMID 3275550.
  2. ^ Voegeli, Martha M.D. "Data on the thermic method for temporary male sterilization (1954)". Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  3. ^ « Contraceptions masculines non déférentielles : revue de la littérature, on www.urofrance.org (consulted on 19 March 2018).
  4. ^ Schill, Wolf-Bernhard, Comhaire, Frank H., Hargreave, Timothy B., Andrology for the Clinician, Springer, 2006.https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783540231714
  5. ^ "Heat Methods". International Male Contraception Coalition. Archived from the original on 2015-04-23. Retrieved 2015-02-17.