top of page

Male Fertility

Male factors contribute to half of infertility. Sperm health responds to the months before conception — we improve the drivers behind the semen analysis.

back to categories
Acupuncture for fertility, PMS, menstrual disorders, PCOS, endometriosis, menopause, and urinary health. Comprehensive women's health care in downtown Seattle.

Fertility Is Not Only Her Story

When couples struggle to conceive, the focus often lands on the woman, but male factors contribute to roughly half of infertility cases. Sperm health — count, movement, shape, and DNA integrity — is a sensitive barometer of overall health, and it responds, for better and for worse, to the inputs of the months before conception. The body is not broken; sperm production is reflecting current conditions, and those conditions can be improved.

This is the GoodMedizen lens. The body is not malfunctioning. It is responding accurately to the information it is being given. Change the inputs and the response begins to change with them.

What Male Fertility Actually Depends On

Sperm are produced continuously on roughly a two-to-three-month cycle, which is the hopeful part: the conditions of the next few months shape the sperm that will be present then. Healthy sperm require good hormonal signaling, low oxidative stress, the right temperature, solid nutrient status, and healthy circulation. Problems in any of these show up as low count, poor motility, abnormal shape, or DNA fragmentation — the last increasingly recognized as important and often missed on a standard semen analysis.

What Is Actually Driving It

  • Oxidative stress, a leading cause of sperm DNA damage
  • Varicocele, a common and treatable vein issue that raises testicular temperature
  • Heat exposure — laptops, hot tubs, tight clothing
  • Hormonal imbalances, including low testosterone and thyroid issues
  • Metabolic factors such as insulin resistance and excess weight
  • Toxins, smoking, excess alcohol, and some medications
  • Nutrient deficiencies — zinc, folate, antioxidants, and CoQ10

Why It Gets Overlooked

Male evaluation often stops at a basic semen analysis, which misses DNA fragmentation and says nothing about the drivers behind poor results. Men are frequently left out of the fertility conversation until late, despite contributing half the picture and despite sperm health being highly responsive to support.

We look at the drivers behind the semen analysis — oxidative stress, hormones, metabolism, nutrients, heat — and use the sperm cycle as a window to improve them before conception. This pairs naturally with our work on IVF and IUI support.

Signs and Patterns

Male fertility issues usually cause no symptoms, which is exactly why testing matters. Contributors worth noting include:

  • Difficulty conceiving after months of trying
  • A known issue with count, motility, or morphology
  • A diagnosed varicocele
  • Low libido or other low-testosterone signs
  • High heat or toxin exposure
  • Metabolic or weight concerns

How We Look at It — The Testing

  • Semen analysis — including DNA fragmentation where available, coordinated with a fertility specialist
  • Hormones — total and free testosterone, FSH, LH, estradiol, and prolactin, read to optimal
  • Thyroid — a full panel with antibodies
  • Metabolic — HbA1c, fasting glucose and insulin, and the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio
  • Oxidative stress and nutrients — zinc, folate, 25-OH vitamin D around 60 to 70, B12, CoQ10 status, and a full iron profile
  • Toxins — heavy-metal testing through Quicksilver Scientific where exposure is likely

Broad baseline labs do not have to be expensive. Services such as Function Health let patients obtain large workups affordably, and we have no financial stake in that — we would rather your budget go toward care than toward lab markups. For targeted functional testing we order through Diagnostic Solutions (GI-MAP) for the microbiome, Quicksilver Scientific for heavy metals, and through Fullscript where it serves you best, with every marker read against optimal ranges rather than the wide line between “normal” and “abnormal.”

The Chinese Medicine Lens

Chinese medicine ties fertility directly to the Kidney, which stores essence, or jing — the deep reproductive vitality from which sperm are made — supported by blood and qi. Poor sperm health reads as depleted Kidney essence, sometimes with damp-heat (relevant to inflammation and oxidative stress) or stagnation (relevant to varicocele and circulation). Treatment replenishes essence, nourishes blood, and clears damp-heat or moves stasis as needed. Acupuncture has been studied for improving sperm parameters.

Building the deep reproductive reserve over a season of treatment fits the biology of the sperm cycle almost exactly.

How Acupuncture and Functional Medicine Help

Acupuncture supports testicular circulation, the essence and Kidney foundation, and the stress and hormonal balance sperm production needs, and it has been studied for improving count, motility, and quality.

The functional work lowers oxidative stress with targeted antioxidants such as CoQ10, corrects hormonal and thyroid issues, improves metabolic health, reduces heat and toxin exposure, and repletes zinc, folate, and vitamin D — timed to the sperm cycle so the coming months produce healthier sperm. Open the exits, fill the coffers, then optimize.

Care That Works With Your Fertility Team

We coordinate with your urologist or reproductive endocrinologist and complement IUI and IVF, and a varicocele or other treatable issue may need their care. We never advise stopping a prescribed treatment.

Your Body Isn’t Broken

If you have spent years being told your labs look normal while you clearly do not feel normal, you have not been imagining it. With male fertility, the work is to improve the conditions behind sperm health over the months before conception, not to stop at a single semen analysis. Your body is not broken. The support has just been missing.

At GoodMedizen in downtown Seattle, we treat the system driving the condition, not only the symptoms it produces.

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • Medium
bottom of page