Although many previous studies have shown that soya is good
for humans by lowering cholesterol, boosting cognitive function and protecting
against prostate cancer (just a few of its health benefits), its consumption
may halve sperm concentrations, research published in the journal Human
Reproduction reveals.
The study was carried out by Harvard School of Public Health
and involved 99 men with fertility-related problems who visited the
When looking at the men’s diet, the researchers found that
men whose diet contained the most soy foods had the lowest sperm concentration.
Usually, the “normal” sperm concentration is between 80 and 120 million per
milliliter. Those men serving one soy portion every two days had a sperm
concentration that was 41 million/mL less than that of men who ate no soy, Jorge
Chavarro, MD, ScD, ScM, of Harvard School of Public’s nutrition department
said.
Dr. Chavarro blamed isoflavones (daidzein, genistein and
glycitein), some chemicals present in nearly all soy-based foods for the low
sperm concentration. Isoflavones appear to have estrogenic effects (estrogen is
known as a female hormone). Therefore, a diet rich in soy products could
interfere with hormonal signaling involved in sperm production. The difference
was even higher in overweight men, whose fat tissue produces more estrogen.
They had a sperm concentration that was 50.45 million/mL less than that of men
who ate no soy.
However, Dr. Chavarro said more study needs to be done in
order to draw clear conclusions on soy consumption and sperm concentration.
"The clinical significance of these findings remains to be
determined. Owing to the scarcity of human data in this area, it is very
important that this issue is examined further, ideally in randomized trials,"
he said.
He further noted that traditional Asian diets high in soy
haven’t been shown to harm fertility. However, men in the
The Soy Protein Association immediately refuted the findings
of the study, pointing out that it was “very small and fails to acknowledge the
large normal variation in sperm counts.” Moreover, Asian men are the best
evidence ever that soy products do not harm fertility, the agency further said.
Dr. Allan Pacey, a senior lecturer in andrology from the
"We
will have to look at adult diet more closely, although the fact that such large
parts of the world have soy food as a major part of their diet and don’t appear
to suffer any greater infertility rates than those on western diets suggests
that any effects is quite small."
The soy bean, Glycine max, is an annual plant native to