Male infertility is a more common disease in life, and patients with this disease often treat the next generation of healthy next generation.However, some patients' treatment effects will not be significant.So what are the reasons for poor results?
Can't be diagnosed clearly
The complicated cause is a comprehensive clinical manifestation of 150 diseases. Some hospitals are limited to the limitations of equipment and technology without clarifying the cause, and they will be blindly treated. In the end, the treatment fails.
No husband and wife check
There are very few patients in clinical practice. The couple did not find a comprehensive examination, but they couldn't get pregnant. The final post -sex trial found that the combination of men's semen and female cervical mucus appeared abnormal reactions.
I can't stick to treatment
Infertility treatment is a long -term process, which is especially important to adhere to treatment.The process of sperm is about 72-90 days, and patients with young sperm patients take 3 months and one treatment. Of course, it will not work if it takes only one month.
During the intercourse skills and the timing of pregnancy
Both husbands and wives do not master the time of conception or S skills after the breeding conditions.
Treatment is unknown
The treatment of infertility is not fundamentally considered. For example, the low survival rate of male sperm can solve the problem by simply using some raw sperm drugs.The problem is the problem of prostate and epididymia.This is the reason why the effect of male infertility treatment is poor.
Treatment means too behind
In the process of treatment, you cannot rely on a single treatment method, nor should it be limited to traditional medical treatment methods.Only by integrating all the treatment advantages can we resolve the problem to the greatest extent.Treating the treatment method is also important as the cause of the poor treatment effect of male infertility.
Disease
Diseases that cannot be solved by modern medicine, severe genital dysplasia, congenital chromosomal abnormalities, and genital cancer.
(Editor in charge: Lin Sen)