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  • Title: Vasectomy, serum assays, and coronary heart disease symptoms and risk factors.
    Author: Mullooly JP, Wiest WM, Alexander NJ, Greenlick MR, Fulgham DL.
    Journal: J Clin Epidemiol; 1993 Jan; 46(1):101-9. PubMed ID: 8433106.
    Abstract:
    We compared three serum assays (two antisperm antibody assays and one assay for circulating immune complexes) and a number of CHD-related variables in 69 vasectomized (V) and 126 non-vasectomized (NV) participants in the Portland Center for the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial. Significant differences between the V and NV men were found in sperm agglutination (SA) and sperm immobilization (SI) titers, as well as in several CHD risk factors, symptoms, and treatments; men in the V group had higher titers for SA and SI, smoked more, and had lower diastolic and systolic blood pressure than men in the NV group. Differences between V and NV in SA and SI activity remained even after we controlled for any effects that CHD risk factors, symptoms, and treatments may have had on the serum assays. Antibody development tended to decrease with age-at-vasectomy and increase with time-post-vasectomy. In the case of SA the antibodies clearly increased with time-post-vasectomy. A comparative study of 69 vasectomized and 126 nonvasectomized men enrolled in the Portland (Oregon, US) Center for the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial evaluated vasectomy as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease. In animal studies, atherosclerosis development has been linked to circulating anti-sperm antibodies and immune complexes formed in response to sperm breakdown products released in the body after vasectomy. Vasectomized men smoked more and had lower diastolic and systolic blood pressure than men in the control group. As expected, both sperm immobilization and sperm agglutination assays were significantly higher among vasectomized men than controls; 29.4% of vasectomized men compared with only 2.5% of nonvasectomized men had sperm immobilization values of 0.3 or less, while 54.1% of vasectomized men compared with 12.5% of nonvasectomized men had sperm agglutination values of 20.0 or above. These significant differences persisted even when a variety of coronary heart disease risk factors and treatments were controlled. Multivariate analysis showed that antibody development tended to decrease with age at vasectomy and increase with time since vasectomy. In the case of sperm agglutination, the antibodies clearly increased with time since vasectomy.
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