Male contraceptive


Male contraceptives, also known as male birth control, are methods of preventing pregnancy that solely involve the male physiology. The most common kinds of male contraception include condoms, outercourse, and vasectomy. In domestic animals, castration is commonly used for contraception. Other forms of male contraception are in various stages of research and development. These include methods like RISUG/VasalGel and ultrasound.

Methods

Surgery

is a surgical procedure for male sterilization or permanent birth control. During the procedure, the vasa deferentia of a man are severed, and then tied or sealed to prevent sperm from entering into the seminal stream. Vasectomies are usually performed in a physician's office or medical clinic. CDC research has estimated there is a probability of 11 failures per 1,000 procedures over 2 years; half of the failures occurred in the first three months after the vasectomy, and no failures occurred after 72 weeks. Due to the presence of sperm retained beyond the blocked vasa deferentia, vasectomies only become effective about three months following the operation.

Condoms

A condom is a sheath-shaped barrier device that may be used during sexual intercourse to reduce the probability of pregnancy. It is rolled onto an erect penis before intercourse and blocks ejaculated semen from entering the sexual partner's reproductive system.
With perfect use, the pregnancy rate of condoms is 2%. Condoms may be combined with other forms of contraception for greater protection. The typical use pregnancy rate among condom users varies depending on the population being studied, ranging from 10 to 18%.

Withdrawal

The withdrawal method is a behavior that involves halting penile-vaginal intercourse to remove the penis out and away from the vagina prior to ejaculation. Pulling out is a popular contraceptive behavior that many couples use because of convenience, dissatisfaction with other methods, it’s free of expense, and has constant availability. Failure rate varies with population studied, but withdrawal is overall not considered to be efficacious enough to be the sole method of pregnancy prevention being utilized. The accepted rate of failure is about 4% with perfect use at every act of intercourse, but the failure rate with typical use ranges in between 18% and 27%

Retrograde ejaculation

Intentional retrograde ejaculation is a primitive form of male birth control. It involves squeezing the urethra at the base or applying pressure to the perineum during orgasm. However, the practice is not considered a reliable method compared to most modern types of birth control.

History

, ca. 40 A.D., described the contraceptive property of hemp seeds and rue in De Materia Medica, a text widely used into medieval times. One test in rats found that these reduced sperm count by more than half. In medieval Persia these herbs were used for male contraception, as well as Gossypium herbaceum, Cyperus longus, Vitex pseudonegundo, Chenopodium ambrosioides, Aristolochia indica, Punica granatum, and Sarcostemma acidum. However, the compound isolated from Gossypium, as well as other cotton seeds and okra has been abandoned for contraceptive use because it was found to cause permanent infertility in ten to twenty percent of users.
In Indian traditional medicine, uses of the neem tree were described in Ayurvedic medicine, by Sushruta and in the Rasarathasamucchaya, Sarangadhara, Bhavaprakasha and Bhisagya Ratnavali. Held traditionally to have antifertility effects, its leaves were demonstrated to reduce pregnancy rate and litter size in a test of male rats.
In 1995, researchers isolated compounds from a plant used in Chinese herbal medicine called Tripterygium wilfordii.
In 2002, researchers fed extracts from the seeds of papaya fruits to monkeys. Subsequently, the monkeys had no sperm in their ejaculate. Traditionally used for contraception, papaya seeds had no apparent ill effects on the testes or other organs of rats tested with a long-term treatment.
Heat-based contraception, dating in concept to the writings of Hippocrates, involves heating the testicles to prevent the formation of sperm. Requiring the maintenance of testes at for 45 minutes, it is not a widely appealing technique, but a variant employing ultrasound has been under investigation.

Research

A goal of research is to develop a reversible male contraceptive, either pharmaceutical, surgical or other.

Medications

Two delivery methods are currently under active study: male hormonal contraceptives that can be taken in pill form by mouth, similar to the existing birth control pill for women and male hormonal injections.
It is predicted that introduction of a long-acting reversible contraception for males could decrease the rate of unintended pregnancy.