A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, September 28, 2018
Male Infertility: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Most medical practitioners consider failure to cause pregnancy within one year as a likelihood of ‘mild infertility’
( September 22, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Mankind
ensures continuity of its species through procreation or reproduction.
Human procreation means sexual reproduction resulting in human
fertilization, usually due to sexual intercourse between a male and a
female. To ensure a successful fertilization both the man and the woman
must have adequate levels of fertility.
Although there are many medical practitioners treating female
infertility, let alone the treatment, knowledge of male infertility
itself is obscure among the general public. In an insightful interview,
one of the handful of male infertility specialists in the whole of South
Asia, Dr. Rohana Priya Susantha Ranasinghe sheds some light about this
lesser known topic and dispels several myths that are deep-rooted in our
society.
Q: What is infertility?
A: Infertility
is the inability of a person, animal or plant to procreate by natural
means. It is normally not the natural state of a healthy adult and in
humans, infertility is the inability to become pregnant or carry a
pregnancy to full term. The interaction between the two opposite
reproductive systems during sexual intercourse results in fertilization
of the female eggs by the sperm.
The World Health Organization defines ‘infertility’ as “a disease of the
reproductive system defined by the failure to achieve a clinical
pregnancy after 12 months or more of regular unprotected sexual
intercourse. Primary infertility is infertility in a couple who have
never had a child. Secondary infertility is failure to conceive
following a previous pregnancy. Infertility may be caused by infections,
ailments or diseases in the man or woman, but often there is no obvious
underlying cause.
Most medical practitioners consider failure to cause pregnancy within
one year as a likelihood of ‘mild infertility’. We don’t necessarily
call it a situation of mild infertility but subject the patients to
fertility tests. Mild infertility is also dependent on age of the
couple. If the patients are 25 years of age or below, it is standard to
wait and see for two years. But if they are around 30 years, period of
one year in waiting is usually the norm and this is reduced to just six
months if the couple is 35 or above.
Q:
There is lot of talk about female infertility among the general public,
but many feel that there is inadequate awareness about male fertility
among the general public. Doctor, what exactly is male infertility?
A: Male
infertility refers to a male’s inability to cause pregnancy in a
fertile female. Although people do not want to accept the magnitude of
the problem due to cultural stigma and gender connotations, it is a
worldwide medical condition now. Although in 1971, only five per cent
of total world population suffered from mild infertility, by 2012 this
figure has trebled to 15% due to various social, environmental and
dietary factors. Various studies have found out that males and females
contribute equally or roughly 40% each to mild infertility, where as the
balance causes for 20% of the cases are categorized as ‘unexplained’.
As I mentioned earlier, infertility is not always primary which means
that the patients are unable to have their first baby but also
secondary, tertiary etc unable to have their second child after having
their first.
Q: How do you diagnose mild male factor infertility (MMFI) and what are the causes for MMFI?
A: Mild
male factor infertility is where the capability of male patient’s sperm
to cause pregnancy is lower than the average male. There are three main
causes for mild male factor infertility.
- Lower sperm count (Quantitative)- The minimum sperm count accepted as a norm by medical practitioners is 15 million sperms in 1 milliliter of semen
- Lower motility – Sperm motility is the movement and swimming of the spermatozoa. Poor sperm motility means that the sperm is unable to move properly. Poor sperm motility is also called
- Abnormal sperm morphology – sperm morphology means the shape or physical appearance of sperm. Abnormalities in the sperm morphology can lead to failure in causing pregnancy resulting in infertility.
But although as you said people are somewhat more aware of female
infertility and there is lot of discussion about it, male infertility
has become a taboo subject and as a result there is hardly any discourse
about it as unlike their female counterparts, males who suffer from
male infertility or mild male factor infertility to be exact, do not
wish to talk about it.

But mild male factor infertility is not a big deal now. Anyone can do a
simple sperm fertility test at any accredited laboratory and find
results on his own. My message is don’t fear infertility and just in
case you have mild male factor infertility, there is treatment available
in Sri Lanka.
Q: If the patient is suffering from mild male factor infertility, what are medical options available for him?
A: Unfortunately,
there are no universally accepted treatments for mild male factor
infertility in modern medicine, except for the Ayurvedic treatment which
we have developed through research. This is similar to paralysis where
there is no treatment currently to cure paralysis, except in Ayurveda.
If a patient is suffering from mild male factor infertility, he has no
option but to seek assisted reproduction technologies. However in a
country like Sri Lanka medical costs are comparatively higher (in
comparison to income of an average citizen). In vitro fertilization
(IVF) or popularly known as the test tube baby method are out of the
reach of ordinary citizens while even the simple Intrauterine
insemination (IUI) also has a significant cost.
Q: So are these procedures helpful in treating mild male factor infertility?
A: Yes
that is problem. Although these can help patients for whom normal or
natural fertilization would be problematic these are still assisted
reproduction technologies and not treatments. The problem is although
these are costly methods the success rates still could be lower. In such
instances, male infertility treatments can greatly enhance the success
rates of these procedures. Unfortunately forget people in the Western
world lot of Asians including Sri Lankans think that male factor
infertility cannot be treated and don’t know that Ayurveda can
successfully treat male factor infertility.
Q: So do you think our society is adequately aware of infertility?
A:
Unfortunately no. There are many factors that impair the reproductive
system’s ability to perform the basic function of reproduction.
Although conceiving a child sounds like a simple and natural process,
the internal and physiological functions are quite complex and
sophisticated and depend on many factors. So patients must know that
production of healthy sperm by the male, production of healthy ovum by
the female, unhindered access to the sperm to reach the ovum in ampulla
in the fallopian tubes, the sperm’s capability to successfully fertilize
the ovum, the ability of the zygote (fertilized egg) to bind
successfully in the endometrium of the uterus and finally the ability of
the zygote to achieve adequate embryo quality.
Although we have achieved many advancements, modern medicine has very
little means to improve sperm count on one hand and motility and
morphology of the sperm on the other hand and as a result mitigation of
male infertility is in most cases unsatisfactory in my view.
However Ayurvedic medicine offer a greater proportion in our society a
significant improvement in sperm quality and quantity and our studies
have continuously proven that herbal-based Ayurvedic treatments promote
the production of healthy sperm.
(Dr.
R.A.R.P. Susantha Ranasinghe [PhD, D.S.A.M.S., B.A.C.(Pg.D.),
M.A.B.A.C.] is an outstanding Ayurvedic physician and researcher who
championed the cause of traditional and hereditary knowledge of herbal
medicine especially in the treatment of infertility. He can be contacted
on dr.susantha@gmail.com)
