How Does Alcohol Consumption Affect Fertility?
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How does alcohol consumption affect fertility? The short and simple answer is that drinking alcohol can adversely
affect fertility and can also cause damage to the baby.
Alcohol Consumption and the Fertility Research Literature
Couples wanting to have children often ask the following: "how does alcohol
consumption affect fertility"? Obviously, the best place to find the answer to this question is in fertility research literature.
Unfortunately, many of the studies seeking to understand the relationship between alcohol and fertility conflict. While drinking
alcohol certainly does affect fertility, experts in this area of research have neither been able to calculate how much alcohol must be ingested
to affect fertility nor how much alcohol consumption is "safe."
Fertility researchers have typically discussed alcohol and fertility in terms of alcohol consumption. That is, many research studies
have focused on whether there is significant difference between low consumption, moderate consumption, and heavy or excessive consumption.
Keep in mind that when anyone discusses alcohol consumption and offers guidelines on drinking, a number of factors are at work.
Metabolism, Gender, Age and Alcohol Guidelines
Due to the fact that not everyone weights the same, has the same metabolism, is the same
gender, is the same age, or reacts the same way to alcohol, any "guidelines" must be taken as that--guidelines and not a perfect system of
measurement or calculation. With this being said, the following represents the differences in low, moderate, and heavy or excessive alcohol
consumption.
- Low Alcohol Consumption: less than one drink per day (for instance, having 1 to 5 drinks per week at different times)
- Moderate Alcohol Consumption: 1 or 2 drinks per day
- Heavy or Excessive Alcohol Consumption: more than 2 drinks per day
How does alcohol consumption affect fertility? The short and simple answer is that drinking alcohol can adversely affect fertility and
can also cause damage to the baby. While researchers have long been aware of the adverse effects of chronic alcoholism on fertility and on
the health of the baby, such as fetal alcohol syndrome, many researchers are now finding that moderate alcohol consumption can also lead to
similar issues.
It should be no surprise that findings such as these have made their way into the doctors' offices. Indeed, it has been found that many,
if not most, doctors recommend that their patients fully disclose their drinking habits before they try to have a child so that the doctor can
provide sound guidance and information that will help avoid fertility and conception problems.

| Like many other diseases, alcoholism is chronic, meaning that it lasts a person's lifetime; it usually follows a
predictable course; and it has symptoms. The risk for developing alcoholism is influenced both by a person's genes and by his or
her lifestyle. |
Some Negative Effects of Drinking Alcohol and Fertility
The following represents some of the negative consequences of drinking alcohol and the fertility and health issues of the mother and/or the
baby:
- infertility
- increased risk for spontaneous abortion
- impaired fetal growth and development
- hypothalmic-pituitary-ovarian dysfunction resulting in the lack of ovulation, the abnormal development of the endometrial lining, and the
absence of menses
- increased risk for a miscarriage, pre-term birth, or stillbirth
- numerous ovulatory dysfunctions
- increased risk of fetal alcohol syndrome and possible congenital heart defects and brain anomalies
- possible mental retardation in the baby
- increased menstrual problems and gynecologic surgery
- altered estrogen and progesterone levels
| As a person engages in a regular habit of drinking, chemical changes in the brain take place. Alcohol consumption
depletes gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), the chemical responsible for inhibiting impulsiveness, and it increases the production
of glutamate (which excites the nervous system) and norepenephrine (a stress-producing hormone). |
Negative Effects of Drinking Alcohol and the Fertility of the Father
The following represents some of the negative consequences of drinking alcohol and the fertility of the father:
- abnormal liver function and a rise in estrogen levels that, in turn, affect sperm development and hormone levels
- killing off the sperm-generating cells in the testicles
| Even when people with alcoholism experience withdrawal symptoms, they nearly always deny the problem, leaving it
up to coworkers, friends, or relatives to recognize the symptoms and to take the first steps toward encouraging treatment.
Denial, in fact, may be an important warning signal for alcoholism. |
Alcohol and Fertility - A Practical Perspective
Let's think about the above information in practical terms. Virtually all researchers agree that excessive drinking significantly
and negatively interferes with fertility for the woman AND for the men.

Furthermore, many researchers feel strongly about the negative affects of moderate drinking and fertility. So the only "real" option
revolves around the following question: will drinking low amounts of alcohol significantly affect our ability in having children or should
we simply abstain from drinking alcohol?
| Alcohol withdrawal symptoms rarely occur in people who only drink once in a while. Alcohol withdrawal symptoms
usually occur in people who have been drinking heavily for weeks or months and then suddenly stop drinking. |
What is considered "safe" or "optimal" changes over time as researchers discover more information. For instance, for many years
"optimal" blood pressure was "120 over 80." More specifically, 120 over 80 means that the systolic pressure, a measure of the heart when it
is beating, is 120 and the diastolic pressure, a measure of the heart at rest, is 80. In the past few years, however, some medical
practitioners and researchers have advocated that "optimal" blood pressure is not 120 over 80 but "115 over 75."
| The more alcohol you drink, the more likely you are to have a hangover the next day. But there's no magic formula.
A single alcoholic drink is enough to trigger a hangover for some people, while others may drink heavily and escape a hangover
entirely. |
So what does this have to do with drinking alcohol and fertility? Simply this: If you are asking the question "how does alcohol
consumption affect fertility," chances are good that you or your partner (or both) drink alcohol and want to have a child. Let's say that
the vast majority of fertility researchers agree that drinking very little alcohol will not affect fertility much, if at all. Fast forward
20 or 30 years. How likely is it that fertility researchers will discover that even the smallest amounts of alcohol negatively affect
fertility AND that drinking 24 to 96 hours before conception, for example, will possibly affect the health of the baby in a deleterious
manner?
| Just as there is no one test for screening or diagnosing alcoholism, there is not one single therapy or medication
that definitively treats alcoholism in all patients. It is not an easy condition to resolve, and many patients will relapse into
drinking several times before gaining lasting sobriety. |
How Does Alcohol Consumption Affect Fertility: Conclusion
Similar to the changing views about "optimal" blood pressure measures, the negative affects of alcohol on fertility may be interpreted more
stringently in the future due to advancements in research. While we all like to have our cake and eat it too, planning to have children is
one area that bypasses such wishes.
Sure it would be nice to enjoy a few drinks while we entertain or go out for the evening. But if drinking alcohol is going to affect
your ability to have children, not to mention the negative health consequences that alcohol presents to the woman who will be having the child,
why not simply abstain from drinking alcohol while you are trying to have a child, while the woman is carrying the child, and while the woman is
breast feeding the child. Staying away from drinking alcohol during these times totally eliminates the countless number of negative "what
if" scenarios that can be imagined.
Not only this, but total abstention from alcohol will rule out any negative alcohol-related consequences associated with the health of your
baby and should give you the peace of mind knowing that you are doing the best you can to give your future child the greatest hope for a life
without preventable medical problems. And finally, you won't have to ask the question, "how does alcohol consumption affect
fertility"?

| In the U.S., more alcoholism is being found in the elderly now that more baby boomers are retiring. |
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| U.S. research shows that the risk for developing alcoholism does indeed run in families. The genes a person
inherits partially explain this pattern, but lifestyle is also a factor. Currently, researchers are working to discover the
actual genes that put people at risk for alcoholism. Your friends, the amount of stress in your life, and how readily available
alcohol is also are factors that may increase your risk for alcoholism. |
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