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Hematospermia (also known as haematospermia, hemospermia, or haemospermia) is the presence of blood in the ejaculate. It is most often a benign symptom. [1] Among men age 40 or older, hematospermia is a slight predictor of cancer, typically prostate cancer. [2] No specific cause is found in up to 70% of cases. [3]
Hypospermia is a condition in which a man has an unusually low ejaculate (or semen) volume, less than 1.5 mL.It is the opposite of hyperspermia, which is a semen volume of more than 5.5 mL. [1]
Semen normally has a whitish-gray colour. It tends to get a yellowish tint as a man ages. Semen colour is also influenced by the food we eat: foods that are high in sulfur, such as garlic, may result in a man producing yellow semen. [19] Presence of blood in semen (hematospermia) leads to a brownish or red coloured ejaculate. Hematospermia is a ...
ASA occur in women and men, including women or men who receive anal sex from men or who perform oral sex on men. [ 17 ] : 210 [ 7 ] ASA have been considered as infertility cause in around 10–30% of infertile couples, and in males, about 12–13% (20,4% in meta-analysis) [ 9 ] of all diagnosed infertility is related to an immunological reason.
The condition and its effects on both men and women is the topic for example of the novel set in Nigeria entitled, The Secret Lives of Baba Segin's Wives. A lot of research has pointed to the relationship between infertility and emasculation. [85] [86] [87] This association has led to infertility being less studied and diagnosed in men over ...
With this new individual-based approach, more gay and bisexual men will be able to give blood. That's a pretty big deal. In 1978, at the height of the AIDS epidemic, ...
For many queer men, donating blood has been an impossible dream until now. Gay, bisexual men can give blood for the first time after the FDA eased its donation policies. Here’s how they feel.
If the person is a secretor, the antibodies will bind to the antigens in their saliva rather than the red blood cells, and will not cause red blood cells to agglutinate. [ 5 ] : 25 Secretor status testing was historically used in forensic science , but this has been made obsolete by advances in DNA testing .