With the increase in the number of male patients suffering from azoospermia around us, more and more male infertility patients have emerged. This has a significant impact on the psychological well-being of any patient and their family well-being, and it must not be taken lightly.
What is spermatozoosis?
The patient can be diagnosed as having this disease if he/she is found to have more than 40% dead sperm through semen testing. "An artificially induced increase in dead sperm due to improper examination methods or non-compliance with normal regulations, or extremely weak or inactive sperm that is not truly dead sperm, is not considered a case of this disease.".
If abstinence is prolonged, the number of dead sperm increases and the sperm survival rate decreases. The survival time of sperm in different environments and temperature conditions also varies, such as in excessively cold or overheated environments. The above two should be distinguished from necrospermia.
How should spermatozoon be treated?
Patients with azoospermia can be cured as long as they promptly go to a professional hospital for appropriate examination and actively cooperate with treatment. There are several clinical treatments for spermatozoosis:
1. Antibiotic treatment is mainly used for semen abnormalities caused by chronic bacterial prostatitis or seminal vesiculitis.
2. Anti inflammatory drug treatment for chronic non bacterial accessory prostatitis. Commonly used drugs include aspirin, indomethacin, butazone, isobutyl propionic acid, and so on.
3. Insufficient nutrition leads to sperm death, which can be treated by supplementing various nutrients to treat sperm death caused by physical fitness.
4. Surgical treatment: If you have varicocele, a large number of sperm will die. Treatment for azoospermia can be achieved by curing varicocele.