Eating nuts as part of a regular diet significantly improves the quality and function of human sperm, researchers in Spain found.
During a 14-week randomized clinical trial, 119 healthy and apparently fertile young men ages 18-35 were put into two groups. One followed their usual western-style diet supplemented with 60 grams — roughly a half cup — of mixed almonds, hazelnuts and walnuts daily. The other group ate a western-style diet without nuts, EurekaAlert reported.
Researchers measured conventional semen parameters and molecular changes and found the group that ate nuts had improvements in their sperm count, vitality, motility and shape.
Lead researcher Albert Salas-Huetos from the Human Nutrition Unit of the Universitat Rovira i Virgili in Reus, Spain said the study was set against a background of general decline in the quantity and quality of human sperm in industrialized countries due to “pollution, smoking, and trends toward a western-style diet.”