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Pain Management 2016
October 03-04, 2016
Volume 5, Issue 5(Suppl)
J Pain Relief
ISSN: 2167-0846 JPAR, an open access journal
conferenceseries
.com
October 03-04, 2016 Vancouver, Canada
International Conference on
Pain Research & Management
Fereshteh Dardmeh et al., J Pain Relief 2016, 5:5(Suppl)
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2167-0846.C1.012The impact of chronic musculoskeletal pain on male reproductive hormones and sperm quality
Fereshteh Dardmeh
1
, H Alipour
1
, H I Nielsen
1
, S Rasmussen
2
, G Van Der Horst
3
and
P Gazerani
1
1
Aalborg University, Denmark
2
Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark
3
University of the Western Cape, South Africa
T
he association between reproductive hormones (FSH, LH, testosterone and prolactin) and human semen parameters has
long been established. Previous studies have recognized that increase in cortisol levels under chronic pain conditions can
potentially lead to testosterone deficiency in chronic pain patients, possibly posing a negative effect on sperm quality and
eventually affecting male fertility potential. However, other studies reporting no significant difference in testosterone, LH and
cortisol levels in men with chronic musculoskeletal pain making it a controversial topic that calls for further investigation.
Blood samples from 10 chronic musculoskeletal pain patients and 10 healthy matched controls were collected to assess serum
reproductive hormone levels at Aalborg University Hospital. Sperm samples were also collected by masturbation in accordance
with the WHO semen sampling guidelines and analyzed for sperm concentration, motility and kinematic parameters using
the Sperm Class Analyzer (SCA®) computer aided sperm analysis system. Serum levels of reproductive hormones and sperm
DNA fragmentation did not show any significant difference between the test and control groups. However, significantly lower
percentage of static and non-progressive motile sperm (P<0.05) was observed in the chronic pain patients; while the control
group demonstrated significantly higher sperm concentration, progressive motility and percentage of hyper-activated sperm
(P<0.01). Chronic musculoskeletal pain patients differ from matched healthy controls in several sperm quality parameters
but no significant difference exists between the two groups in terms of reproductive hormone levels. These findings highlight
the importance of other factors involved in sperm quality decline in chronic pain patients, which needs further investigation.
Biography
Fereshteh Dardmeh has completed her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) from Urmia University, Iran in 2011. She then joined the Laboratory of Reproductive
Biomedicine and Center for Sensory-Motor Interaction (SMI) in the Department of Health, Science and Technology of Aalborg University, Denmark as a PhD
student in 2013. She has since been actively involved in teaching and research in the area of Reproductive Health and Medicine with her current studies focusing
on “Probiotic supplements as a novel strategy in pain management and translational investigations of possible associations between pain, obesity and fertility”.
feda@hst.aau.dk