Free AdviceGet Free Advice
Home | Get advice | Give advice | Topics | Columnists | - !START HERE! -
Make Suggestions | Sitemap

Get Advice


Search Questions

Ask A Question

Browse Advice Columnists

Search Advice Columnists

Chat Room

Give Advice

View Questions
Search Questions
Advice Topics

Login

Username:
Password:
Remember me
Register for free!
Lost Password?

Want to give Advice?

Sign Up Now
(It's FREE!)

Miscellaneous

Shirts and Stuff
Page Backgrounds
Make Suggestions
Site News
Link To Us
About Us
Terms of Service
Help/FAQ
Sitemap
Contact Us


question


Question Posted Sunday January 15 2006, 8:25 pm

you answered my 'sperm' question. i was wondering if you could detail it??

[ Answer this question ]
Want to answer more questions in the Sexual Health and Reproduction category?
Maybe give some free advice about: General Sex Questions?


HectorJr answered Sunday January 15 2006, 10:25 pm:
How long do sperm live outside of the body? Can sperm live in water?
27th April 1999

Living sperm (spermatozoa) - like other cells - require suitable conditions for survival outside the body. The chemical make-up of the fluid medium in which they are suspended and the temperature at which it is maintained are two key variables. The technique of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) requires that sperm are kept in optimal condition for variable amounts of time before they are placed in contact with eggs for fertilisation. This can be done either by freezing and then re-thawing when required, or by incubation at normal body temperature for up to several hours in a suitable fluid medium (Liu, Clarke, and Baker, 1986). The fluid has to be isotonic for the sperm and contain nutrients and other materials for the sperms’ survival. One of the difficulties in keeping sperm alive in a culture dish is that they produce oxygen free radicals. These are highly reactive molecules which at lower levels are thought to control normal sperm function, but which can become damaging at higher levels (Aitken, 1995; Gomez and Aitken, 1996).

Sperm would not survive for long in plain water - although the seminal fluid would provide some protection initially, the water is very hypotonic to the sperm cells and would soon cause them to swell and disintegrate.



So in other words, the conditions outside the human body kill it pretty fast. My science teacher said you couldn't get pregnant just by putting it there [other than through intercourse]. Hope that helped.

[ HectorJr's advice column | Ask HectorJr A Question
]


More Questions:

<<< Previous Question: sperm
Next Question >>> dumb question

Recent popular questions:
Want to give advice?

Click here to start your own advice column!

What happened here with my gamer friends?

All content on this page posted by members of advicenators.com is the responsibility those individual members. Other content © 2003-2014 advicenators.com. We do not promise accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any advice and are not responsible for content.

Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content.
Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.

[Valid RSS] eXTReMe Tracker