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Male Infertility — Causes, Diagnosis & Treatment

Male infertility means a man's sperm is, on its own, unlikely to achieve a pregnancy — usually because of a low sperm count, poor sperm movement (motility), abnormal sperm shape (morphology), a blockage, or a hormonal cause. It is common: a male factor contributes to roughly half of all couples' difficulty conceiving. Most causes are identifiable with a simple, private test and many are treatable. At Aansh Hospital & IVF Center — a government-registered Level-2 ART clinic (Reg. No. MH/AC/2024/15441/L2/Chandrapur/132) — male evaluation and treatment are handled discreetly and in-house. Your privacy comes first. Male fertility testing is straightforward and completely confidential. Infertility is a medical matter, not a measure of a man — and a male factor is involved in about half of all cases. At Aansh, the couple is evaluated and treated together as a unit, led by Dr. Shweta Agarwal (MBBS, DGO), with andrology and sperm work handled in our in-house lab by Senior Clinical Embryologist Aayush Agarwal, Ph.D. You can message us privately on WhatsApp; in Marathi and Hindi, this evaluation begins with वीर्य विश्लेषण (semen analysis), part of addressing पुरुष वंध्यत्व (male infertility).

Medically reviewed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO · Last updated June 2026
Dr. Shweta Agarwal, Founder & Lead Fertility Specialist, at Aansh Hospital & IVF Center, Chandrapur Govt. ART-registered
Dr. Shweta Agarwal MBBS, DGO · Reproductive Medicine
5,000+IVF babies
30+Years of experience
4.9★500+ reviews · Google, JustDial, Practo
94%AI embryo-analysis accuracy · Garbha.ai
ART Level 2 RegisteredGovt. of India — ART Act 2021
Dr. Shweta AgarwalMBBS, DGO · Reproductive Medicine
On-site embryology labLed by Aayush Agarwal, Ph.D.
Marathi · Hindi · EnglishChandrapur · Nagpur · Vidarbha

Medically reviewed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO. Last updated: June 2026.

Information on this page is educational and does not replace a medical consultation. Outcomes depend on individual clinical factors.


How common is male infertility?

A male factor is involved in approximately half of all couples who struggle to conceive — either on its own or alongside a female factor. Infertility is often assumed to be a "female problem," but the evidence does not support that assumption.

This is precisely why both partners are tested from the start (see fertility diagnostics). Identifying a male factor early avoids months of investigating only one partner and leads directly to the right plan.


What causes male infertility?

Male infertility usually comes down to a problem with the number, movement, or shape of sperm, or with how sperm reach the ejaculate. The common causes are:

  • Low sperm count (oligospermia): Fewer sperm than normal, reducing the chance of fertilisation.
  • Poor motility (asthenospermia): Sperm that do not move well enough to reach and fertilise an egg.
  • Abnormal shape (teratospermia): A high proportion of sperm with structural abnormalities.
  • Varicocele: Enlarged veins in the scrotum that can overheat the testes and impair sperm quality — a common and often treatable cause.
  • Azoospermia (no sperm in the ejaculate): Either an obstruction blocking sperm, or reduced production. Sperm can often still be retrieved surgically. (See azoospermia.)
  • Hormonal causes: Imbalances in testosterone, FSH or LH affecting sperm production.
  • Obstruction: A blockage anywhere in the reproductive tract, including after vasectomy or infection.
  • Lifestyle and environmental factors: Smoking, excess alcohol, obesity, heat exposure, certain medications, and chronic stress.

How is male infertility diagnosed?

Diagnosis starts with one simple, non-invasive test and adds further tests only if needed.

Semen analysis — the starting point

The semen analysis is the first and most important test. It measures sperm count (concentration), motility (movement), and morphology (shape), along with volume and other parameters, assessed against WHO reference values. A sample is given after 2–5 days of abstinence, in private. If a result is abnormal, the test is usually repeated for confirmation before drawing conclusions.

Hormonal evaluation

Blood tests for testosterone, FSH and LH identify hormonal causes of reduced sperm production.

Scrotal ultrasound & Doppler

An ultrasound of the scrotum can detect a varicocele or other structural causes that affect sperm quality.

Genetic testing (selected cases)

In severe cases — such as very low counts or azoospermia — genetic tests may be advised to identify an underlying cause and guide treatment.

All of this is part of a complete couple fertility workup, so the male and female evaluations move together.


What are the treatment options for male infertility?

Treatment depends entirely on the cause and severity. The path is decided together with the couple after the workup.

Situation Typical approach
Mild abnormality; lifestyle-related Lifestyle changes + medical management; sometimes timed intercourse
Mild–moderate male factor, female tubes healthy IUI — washed, concentrated sperm placed into the uterus
Moderate–severe male factor IVF with ICSI — a single sperm injected into each egg
Azoospermia (no sperm in ejaculate) Surgical sperm retrieval (TESA/PESA/TESE) + ICSI
Varicocele affecting sperm quality Varicocele repair, where clinically indicated
  • Lifestyle & medical management: For many men, stopping smoking, reducing alcohol, weight management and treating any infection or hormonal issue can meaningfully improve sperm parameters.
  • IUI: Suitable for mild male factor when the female partner's tubes are open.
  • IVF with ICSI: For moderate-to-severe male factor, ICSI injects one healthy sperm directly into each egg, bypassing the barriers a weaker sperm cannot cross. Even a very small number of viable sperm can be enough.
  • Surgical sperm retrieval: For azoospermia, sperm can often be retrieved directly from the testes or epididymis and used with ICSI.

Treatment cost varies by the path chosen. See IVF cost & 0% EMI for ranges and financing.


Can lifestyle changes improve sperm quality?

Yes — lifestyle changes can meaningfully improve sperm health, but they take time to show. Sperm production (spermatogenesis) runs on a cycle of about 72–90 days, so any change — stopping smoking, cutting alcohol, losing weight, improving diet, reducing heat exposure — typically takes around 3 months to register in a follow-up semen analysis.

Practical, evidence-aligned steps include:

  • Stopping smoking and limiting alcohol.
  • Reaching and maintaining a healthy weight.
  • Regular exercise and stress management.
  • A diet rich in antioxidants (vitamins C and E, zinc, selenium).
  • Avoiding excess heat to the testes (saunas, prolonged laptop-on-lap, tight heat).

Because of the ~3-month cycle, a follow-up test is usually scheduled about 3 months after starting changes.


Is the consultation private, and what does it cost?

Your consultation, test results and records are kept confidential. The semen analysis is provided in a private setting, and you can ask questions or share reports discreetly over WhatsApp before visiting. Male evaluation is discussed sensitively, as part of the couple's care, never in isolation.

Cost depends on which tests and treatments are clinically indicated — a semen analysis is a modest, standalone test, while treatments such as IUI, IVF/ICSI, or surgical sperm retrieval are priced separately. You receive a transparent estimate before anything is done, and 0% EMI (3–24 months) is available for treatment. See IVF cost & 0% EMI.


When should a man get tested?

A semen analysis is recommended if:

  • You and your partner have been trying to conceive for 12 months without success (or 6 months if the female partner is 35 or older).
  • You have a history of undescended testes, testicular injury, infection (such as mumps), or previous surgery in the groin or scrotum.
  • You have noticed scrotal swelling, lumps, or discomfort.
  • You have a known hormonal condition or take medication that can affect fertility.

Testing early is simple and low-risk — and because sperm takes about three months to renew, starting sooner gives any treatment more time to work.


Good to know

Frequently asked questions

How common is male infertility, really?
A male factor is involved in about half of all couples who have difficulty conceiving — sometimes on its own, sometimes alongside a female factor. This is why both partners are tested from the start. Male infertility is a common medical condition, and in many cases it is treatable once the cause is identified.
What does a semen analysis check, and is it private?
A semen analysis measures sperm count, motility (movement) and morphology (shape), plus volume and other parameters, against WHO reference values. The sample is given privately after 2–5 days of abstinence. It is the first and most important male fertility test, and your results are kept confidential.
Can I still father a child if I have a zero sperm count (azoospermia)?
Often, yes. In many men with azoospermia, sperm is still produced in the testes but cannot reach the ejaculate. Sperm can frequently be retrieved directly through surgical sperm retrieval (TESA/PESA/TESE) and used with ICSI. Even a very small number of sperm can be enough, as only one is needed per egg.
Can lifestyle changes improve my sperm?
Yes. Stopping smoking, reducing alcohol, maintaining a healthy weight, exercising, and eating an antioxidant-rich diet can improve sperm quality. Because sperm production takes about 72–90 days, improvements usually show after about 3 months, so a follow-up semen analysis is typically scheduled around that time.
Does a varicocele always need surgery?
No. A varicocele (enlarged scrotal veins) is treated only when it causes pain, testicular shrinkage, or is clearly affecting sperm quality. If sperm parameters are normal, surgery may not be needed. When a varicocele is impairing fertility, repair can improve sperm quality in selected cases.
What is the difference between IUI and IVF/ICSI for male infertility?
IUI places washed, concentrated sperm directly into the uterus and is used for mild male factor when the female partner's tubes are open. IVF with ICSI — injecting a single sperm into each egg — is preferred for moderate-to-severe male factor, where sperm cannot fertilise the egg naturally or through IUI.
Do both partners need to be involved?
Yes. At Aansh, the couple is evaluated and treated as a unit — the male and female workups proceed together so no time is lost. Dr. Shweta Agarwal plans care for both partners, and sperm and embryo work is handled in-house by Senior Clinical Embryologist Aayush Agarwal, Ph.D.
Will my consultation and records stay confidential?
Yes. Your consultation, test results and records are kept private. The semen analysis is provided in a private setting, and you can ask questions or share reports discreetly on WhatsApp before visiting. Male fertility is discussed with sensitivity and as part of the couple's overall care.
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