Shorter Ejaculation Intervals May Improve Sperm Quality: Study
Written By : Medha Baranwal
Medically Reviewed By : Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2026-06-14 16:15 GMT | Update On 2026-06-14 16:15 GMT
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UK: Researchers have found in a new study that prolonged abstinence may negatively affect sperm quality by increasing oxidative stress and DNA damage, leading to reduced sperm motility and vitality. In contrast, shorter intervals between ejaculations may improve sperm quality and could potentially enhance both natural conception and assisted reproductive outcomes.
The findings, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, are based on a large meta-analysis led by Krish Sanghvi from the University of Oxford. The study evaluated how in vivo sperm storage influences sperm quality, fertility outcomes, and underlying biological mechanisms across humans and multiple animal species. By analyzing 115 human studies and 56 studies in non-human animals, the researchers provide comprehensive insights into the effects of sperm storage duration.
Sperm storage, while evolutionarily advantageous, allows flexibility between mating and fertilization. However, the analysis shows that prolonged storage leads to post-meiotic sperm senescence, a process of time-dependent deterioration in sperm quality. Mechanistically, sperm are particularly vulnerable due to limited DNA repair capacity, reduced antioxidant protection, and high metabolic demands, making them prone to oxidative stress and energy depletion over time.
The study also demonstrated that sperm deterioration is not limited to laboratory observations but has real-world reproductive consequences. In humans, longer abstinence was associated with reduced sperm motility and viability, while in non-human animals, extended storage affected fertilization success and embryo quality. These findings highlight the biological trade-off between sperm quantity and quality.
From a clinical perspective, the results suggest that optimizing the timing of ejaculation could improve reproductive outcomes. While longer abstinence may increase sperm count, shorter intervals may yield functionally superior sperm, particularly relevant in assisted reproductive technologies.
Key Takeaways:
- Prolonged sperm storage is associated with increased oxidative stress and DNA damage, leading to reduced sperm quality.
- Longer abstinence in men is linked to lower sperm motility and viability.
- Shorter intervals between ejaculations may improve sperm function and fertility outcomes.
- Post-meiotic sperm senescence is driven by limited repair capacity, high metabolic activity, and oxidative damage.
- Similar patterns of sperm deterioration were observed across multiple animal species.
- Extended sperm storage in animals was associated with reduced fertilization success and poorer embryo quality.
- Sperm storage presents a trade-off between higher sperm count and better sperm quality.
- Findings have implications for fertility treatments, including optimizing timing for sperm collection in assisted reproduction.
Reference:
Krish Sanghvi, Rebecca Dean, Shinichi Nakagawa, Klaus Reinhardt, Irem Sepil, Regina Vega-Trejo; Sperm storage causes sperm senescence in human and non-human animals. Proc Biol Sci 1 March 2026; 293 (2067): 20253181. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.3181
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